Man accused of stalking Caitlin
Clark proclaims himself 'guilty as charged' in 1st court appearance
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[January 16, 2025]
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — One day after Michael Thomas Lewis was
charged with felony stalking of Indiana Fever star and WNBA rookie
of the year Caitlin Clark, the 55-year-old Texas man shouted “guilty
as charged” as soon as he sat down in a courtroom Tuesday.
Lewis is accused of repeated and continued harassment of the
22-year-old Clark beginning on Dec. 16, the Marion County
prosecutor’s office wrote in a court filing.
WISH-TV of Indianapolis reported that Lewis behaved “very
erratically” in his first court appearance and, at times, appeared
to be laughing and joking while noting he had not been taking his
medication while jailed or while living out of his car.
Prosecutors said they were seeking a higher than standard bond
because Lewis traveled from his home in Texas to Indianapolis “with
the intent to be in close proximity to the victim.” Lewis was
ordered held on a $50,000 bond, and if the bond is posted, he will
be required to wear an ankle monitor and remain in Indiana.
The court also filed a not guilty plea on Lewis' behalf, and Judge
Angela Davis suggested Lewis “remain silent” in jail and only speak
with his attorney.
Lewis received a no-contact order and the stay-away order sought by
prosecutors that bars him from being within 500 feet of either of
the two arenas where the Fever play their home games.
His pretrial hearing will be held remotely on March 31.
In one post on X, Lewis said he had been repeatedly been driving by
Gainbridge Fieldhouse, the Indiana Pacers' home arena where the
Fever also play. In another, he said he had “one foot on a banana
peel and the other on a stalking charge.” Other messages directed at
Clark were sexually explicit.
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Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) walks off the court after the
Fever were eliminated by the Connecticut Sun in an WNBA basketball
playoff game, Sept. 25, 2024, in Uncasville, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica
Hill, File)
The social media posts “actually caused Caitlin
Clark to feel terrorized, frightened, intimidated, or threatened”
and an implicit or explicit threat also was made “with the intent to
place Caitlin Clark in reasonable fear of sexual battery,”
prosecutors wrote in the Marion County Superior Court filing.
The FBI learned the X account belonged to Lewis and that the
messages were sent from IP addresses associated with an Indianapolis
hotel and downtown public library.
Indianapolis police spoke with Lewis on Jan. 8 at his hotel room. He
told officers he was in Indianapolis on vacation. When asked why he
was making so many posts about Clark, Lewis replied: “Just the same
reason everybody makes posts,” according to court documents.
He told police that he didn’t mean any harm and that he fantasized
about being in a relationship with Clark.
The Associated Press named Clark its Female Athlete of the Year for
2024. After leading Iowa to last year’s national championship game,
she was the top pick in the WNBA draft and went on to win rookie of
the year honors in the league.
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