Nashville

Murfreesboro ‘Massage Class’ Ruse Keeps Neighbor’s Rapist Locked Up for 11 Years

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Published on March 23, 2026
Murfreesboro ‘Massage Class’ Ruse Keeps Neighbor’s Rapist Locked Up for 11 YearsSource: Pollinator at en.wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Tennessee's Court of Criminal Appeals has signed off on the convictions and 11-year prison term for Richard Lawrence Canada, a former manager at the Murfreesboro Athletic Club who was found guilty of raping a longtime neighbor. The ruling keeps intact an order that Canada serve the entire sentence behind bars, with no early release, and confirms that he will remain under lifetime community supervision and on the sex-offender registry. Prosecutors said the case began in July 2021, when Canada lured his 20-year-old neighbor to his home under the guise of a massage-therapy class, secretly recorded the encounter on a hidden camera, and then escalated the interaction to sexual penetration. The appeals panel left the verdict and sentence in place even as it narrowed one of the sentencing enhancements originally applied by the trial court.

What the appeals court said

Writing for a three-judge panel, Judge Jill Bartee Ayers said the jury "accredited the victim's testimony" that Canada presented the meeting as a massage-related school exercise and never mentioned anything sexual. The opinion highlighted what prosecutors described as deliberate planning that went into the encounter and pointed to other similar videos recovered from Canada's electronic devices as support for the length of the term, according to Tampa Free Press.

Trial and sentence

Canada was convicted in a jury trial in May 2023 on multiple counts of rape and, on July 14, 2023, was sentenced to 11 years in prison with the court ordering that he serve 100 percent of the term. Local reporting and court filings show that the convictions stemmed from testimony about the July 2021 encounter, and that separate counts of sexual exploitation of a minor remain on the docket. As reported by WGNS, Canada was taken into custody following sentencing, and court records list the matter under docket number 75CC1-2022-CR-86965 on the Rutherford County docket.

Prosecutors' evidence

At trial, prosecutors described a spa-like set-up at Canada's home, with candles, soft music, and a pallet on the floor, and said he secretly recorded the encounter. The victim testified she initially believed she was participating in a legitimate school-related massage exercise until the conduct escalated. Investigators also reported finding suspicious imagery on Canada’s devices, which led to separate counts alleging sexual exploitation of a minor. The appeals court agreed that the trial judge went too far in applying an "abuse of private trust" sentencing enhancement based solely on the fact that Canada and the victim were neighbors, but it concluded that the 11-year sentence was still justified by the level of planning and the presence of other similar videos, as detailed by Tampa Free Press and reflected in county filings.

What this means under Tennessee law

Under Tennessee law, rape can be based on deception, including when "the sexual penetration is accomplished by fraud," per Tennessee Code § 39-13-503, available via Justia. Sentencing enhancements such as "abuse of private trust" come from the state's sentencing statute and appellate guidance interpreting Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-114. Courts generally require proof that a defendant actually occupied a position of private trust before they will increase a sentence on that basis, as discussed in recent appellate opinions accessible through Justia.

Where the case stands now

The Court of Criminal Appeals opinion, filed this week, affirms Canada's convictions and leaves his 11-year prison term in place. The appeal appears on the state docket as M2025-00397-CCA-R3-CD. Tennessee courts' oral-argument docket and Rutherford County filings track the appeal and related post-trial proceedings. Local reporting noted that Canada's defense team pointed to his lack of prior criminal history and a Parkinson's diagnosis at sentencing, and he remains in state custody while his lawyers weigh any further filings, according to WGNS and county records.