CLEVELAND, Ohio -- A Cleveland man who admitted to raping a 13-year-old girl and two women at gunpoint and shooting a man during a 2017 crime spree when he was 17 was sentenced Monday to more than three decades in prison.

Dale Reed Jr., 18, agreed with Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Kathleen Sutula that his string of crimes, carried out from February through May, sowed fear in the Lee-Harvard neighborhood where Reed operated.

Reed, a small-time weed dealer, lured three of his victims to a vacant house on East 147th Street to attack them. He broke into the bedroom of the young girl as she slept and raped her when she awoke, and shot the man as he pumped gas in separate incidents.

"You're a domestic terror who just wreaked havoc on these people, right?" Sutula asked.

A handcuffed Reed replied, "I agree your honor."

Sutula sentenced Reed to 33 years in prison for the crimes he committed as a juvenile. Since Reed was 17 at the time, and because he used a gun and has previous criminal convictions in juvenile court for firearm offenses, his case was automatically moved to adult court.

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O'Malley said Reed is the latest example of a serial offender whose criminal career began as a young teenager and outgrew the abilities of the juvenile court.

"The people of Cleveland are much safer now that Dale Reed is behind bars," O'Malley told cleveland.com Monday.

Reed began drinking and smoking marijuana when he was 12, took his first hit of ecstasy at 15, and moved on to acid, molly and and PCP when he was 16 and 17, Sutula said in court Monday. He was arrested several times by police in Shaker Heights for assault, aggravated robbery, obstructing official business and receiving stolen property, records show. He never served time behind bars.

Reed's defense lawyer, James Hofelich, asked Sutula to impose a more lenient sentence, in part citing that Reed had not served any significant time as a juvenile.

Sutula called that argument "unique."

"When I look at his record, I wonder what it is they do over at juvenile court?" Sutula said. "He's been given one break after another and here you are saying to me in essence, 'Well he's always been given a break so lets give him one more break?' No. No one gave these victims a break. This court's not going to give him a break."

Reed launched the crime spree for which he was sentenced Monday on Feb. 6, when he approached a 32-year-old man pumping gas at a station at the corner of Lee and Harvard avenues. Reed pulled a pistol and shot the man in the leg. He stole his wallet and cellphone.

Nine days later, Reed lured one of his marijuana customers into a vacant home on East 147th Street to sell her drugs. Instead, Reed pulled a pistol, then raped the 20-year-old woman. When he was finished and started to leave, Reed forced the woman to lie on the ground and count to 60 before she left. He stole the woman's purse, cellphone and car.

Reed broke into an apartment in Cleveland on April 30, and went into the room of the 13-year-old girl who lived there with her mother. She awoke as Reed rummaged through her drawers. Reed pulled the pistol and raped her, then told her he would hurt her family if she ever told anyone what happened to her. He left the house with her mother's cellphone, purse and an ashtray.

Three days later, Reed met up with a 33-year-old woman he had met at a bar a few weeks earlier at the same vacant house on East 147th street. Reed said he would lend her money, and when she got there, he pulled a pistol and stole her cellphone and her purse.

Reed's arrest came May 18, when he lured another woman, 23, to the same vacant house. This woman, who was on break from her job at a nursing home, went to a gas station on Kinsman Road to meet a friend to borrow money. Reed started chatting her up and offered to let her use his food stamp card to buy her something to eat. Reed told the woman his card was at his house, and she agreed to go with him to get it. As soon as they got to the side door of the vacant home, Reed pulled out a pistol and raped her at gunpoint.

This woman had several mutual Facebook friends with Reed, and she alerted police after she recognized him online when she wrote happened to her.

Reed then took to Facebook Live and bragged in a 17-minute video, in which he at times wielded a what prosecutors say was a machine gun, about robbing the woman. He denied raping the woman, and repeatedly insulted her and called her derogatory names, and at one point another teenager is holding the gun and pointing it toward the camera as the two sing about "snitches."

Reed was arrested within days, and DNA collected during his arrest matched that contained in the rape-kits collected from all three rape victims.

The 13-year-old girl's mother, the only of Reed's victims to speak at his sentencing, said her daughter lives in constant fear of falling victim to another attack, and she herself feels like she failed to protect her child. She has taken time away from work and night school to be with her children.

"I just want people to know that sometimes we get justice but it does not change the everyday fears," she said.

Sutula began peppering Reed with questions about where he got his gun. He offered that a friend gave it to him. When she asked him which friend, Reed gave it. When she asked him how to spell the name, he again obliged.

Prosecutors and police detectives at the state's table traded glances.

Reed went on to say he left the gun at his "place of residence," and said the name of the person he was staying with. Investigators never found the gun.

"Well your place of residence is going to be the Lorain Correctional Institute for the foreseeable future," Sutula said. "I hope you use your time wisely."

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