PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Nicholas Alahverdian, a convicted sex offender accused of faking his own death to avoid a rape charge in Utah, can be extradited to the United States from Scotland, a court ruled on Wednesday.

Since his arrest in December 2021 at a Glasgow hospital, Judge Norman McFadyen of Edinburgh Sheriff Court listened to Alahverdian’s explanations for why authorities had the wrong man. According to authorities, Alahverdian, 36, has used several aliases over the years and faces allegations of rape and domestic violence.

Known in Scotland as Nicholas Rossi, Alahverdian has been using a wheelchair and oxygen mask while speaking in a British accent during his court appearances. He has also identified himself as Arthur Knight, an Irish orphan who moved to England as a boy and has never traveled to the United States.

But McFadyen had previously dismissed Alahverdian’s claims, including that hospital staff surreptitiously took his fingerprints so that a Utah prosecutor could frame “Arthur Knight” for Alahverdian’s crimes.

On Wednesday, the judge called the fugitive “dishonest and deceitful as he is evasive and manipulative.”

“These unfortunate facets of his character have undoubtedly complicated and extended what is ultimately a straightforward case,” McFadyen added.

Alahverdian, also known as Nicholas Rossi, claimed to be someone else

Alahverdian was tracked down by Interpol and arrested in a Glasgow hospital in December 2021, where he was suffering from COVID-19. Since then, he has pretended to be an English academic snared in an international tabloid saga. But much of the story has been of his own making.

He told McFadyen last fall that while hospital staff conspired to ink identifying tattoos on his arms while he was in a COVID coma, someone else had sent his fingerprints to Utah to match those of the real Alahverdian. He also denied he was the person in Pawtucket police mug shots from a decade ago. 

In June he told the court several absurdities, including that he and his legal team were close to identifying the real person who faked his death in this case to the detriment of the real Nicholas Alahverdian.