WEST PALM BEACH — In 1985, a bespectacled grandmother suffering from Alzheimer’s disease wandered out of her home in Lake Worth Beach, Florida, and into the car of a stranger. He dumped her body 30 miles away on a dead-end dirt road, naked and badly beaten.

She died 11 days later.

The identity of Mildred Matheny’s rapist and killer remained a mystery for nearly four decades — the only clue, a vaginal swab of genetic material for years considered too degraded for scientists to identify the rapist who left it. This year, a jury decided a partial DNA match was enough to convict a man of her murder: Richard Lange, who was 25 at the time of Matheny’s attack.

Circuit Judge Daliah Weiss sentenced Lange, now 63, to life in prison for first-degree murder Wednesday. In a letter to the judge, Lange’s family promised to appeal the conviction, which his attorney Scott Skier called “confusing and inconsistent” with the facts of the case.

“The man sitting in the defendant’s chair is not the man we know,” Skier said, reading aloud from the letter written by Lange’s family. “The actions attributed to him are not his character.”

Letter describes man found guilty as living ‘life of virtue’

The letter cast a different light on the man convicted of beating 78-year-old Matheny so brutally that she was left moaning and incoherent on Old Indiantown Road west of Jupiter on April 27, 1985. It described Lange as a loving father, son, brother, and uncle who “led a life of virtue” in accordance with his Catholic faith.

In her own letter, Matheny’s great niece reminded the judge that the trauma Matheny endured was so great, nurses at Martin Memorial Hospital in Stuart had to forcibly pry her legs apart to conduct a rape kit.

From their swabs, detectives created a genetic profile containing a mix of Matheny’s DNA and that of her assailant. A forensic scientist with the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office isolated the unknown DNA from Matheny’s in 2021 and created a profile with compelling genetic similarities to Lange.