Miss Hall’s teacher charged with raping two female students, DA says


A former teacher at a venerable Massachusetts boarding and day school for girls has been charged with three counts of rape, the Berkshire County District Attorney’s Office announced.

Matthew Rutledge, who had been accused of grooming students for sex during his 30-plus-year career at Miss Hall’s School, was indicted by a grand jury on the strength of testimony from two former students named Hilary Simon and Melissa Fares, the prosecutors said.

Rutledge, 67, was charged nearly two years after Simon and Fares came forward with sexual abuse allegations — and after the DA’s office initially declined to charge the ex-teacher with a crime because the accusers were 16 at the time of the alleged incidents. The age of consent in Massachusetts is 16 and state law does not criminalize sexual relations between teachers and students regardless of age.

Miss Hall's School in Pittsfield, Mass.
Miss Hall’s School in Pittsfield, Mass.Google Maps

“They have waited far too long for justice and, while I recognize our office took time to develop a path forward, I hope it is evident that I remained committed to holding the Defendant accountable for his crimes,” Berkshire District Attorney Timothy Shugrue said in a statement Tuesday.

The DA’s office said it is in the process of sending Rutledge a formal summons, after which he will be given an arraignment date by the Berkshire Superior Court.

“We stand with the Survivors whose courage and determination played an indispensable role in this outcome, and we are grateful they will finally have the opportunity to seek justice in the criminal case against Matt Rutledge,” Miss Hall’s School said in a statement.

Rutledge, who records show lives in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, could not be reached for comment. He is charged with two counts of rape against Fares and one count of rape against Simon, according to the two women and Julia Sabourin, the chief operating officer at the DA’s office.

Fares, now 33, was allegedly abused by Rutledge from 2007 to 2010 and Simon, now 37, was allegedly abused from 2001 to 2005. During and after they were both students at the school.

Both Fares and Simon testified before the grand jury on Tuesday.

Fares said she was relieved, saying, “There were too many moments where it felt like it might not go anywhere.”

“So I held onto hope, but also protected myself from expecting it,” she said. “That’s part of what makes this moment feel so significant.”

Simon said she too, at times, feared that Rutledge would never be held accountable.

“What I do know is that Melissa and I were clear from Day 1 that there was never any consent,” Simon said. “We never wavered on that. Not once. And I think that consistency, that refusal to let anyone reframe what happened to us, is part of what kept this case alive.”

For decades, Rutledge had been a “larger than life” figure at the school who would bellow “Make way for Mr. Wonderful” as he walked down the hallways, according to a report prepared for Miss Hall’s School after the allegations against the teacher first surfaced.

Rutledge had, at various times, served as a history teacher, coach, resident, adviser and department chair, the report stated.

But in April 2024, Rutledge resigned after Fares reported him to the school administration for allegedly sexually abusing and exploiting her when she was a student and after she graduated.

Shortly afterward, Simon came forward with her accusations against Rutledge.

That same month, the local DA, the Pittsfield Police Department, and the state Department of Children and Families all launched investigations into the Rutledge allegations. In Massachusetts, there is no statute of limitations for reporting rape allegations for victims 16 and younger; for anyone 17 and older, the statute of limitations is 15 years.

Meanwhile, word of the alleged abuse by Rutledge began spreading on social media among the angry alumnae of Miss Hall’s School.

Faced with an uproar, Miss Hall’s School hired a law firm to investigate the allegations.

The report, released in August 2025, found that Rutledge had been reported for inappropriate behavior to school leadership multiple times and that the school failed to act. It found that Rutledge had abused five girls over a 20-year span.

It also detailed other cases of sexual misconduct going back to the 1940s against students by other former staffers at Miss Hall’s School.

Head of School Julia Heaton issued an apology on behalf of the school and herself after the report was released.

In October 2024, the hopes of Fares and Simon that Rutledge would soon be prosecuted were temporarily dashed when Shugrue announced his office could not press charges against the teacher.

“Massachusetts law defines the age of consent as 16,” Shugrue said in a statement at the time. “While the alleged behavior is profoundly troubling, it is not illegal.”

Disappointed but not dissuaded, Fares and Simon worked with state lawmakers to help get support for a bill that was introduced that would allow for people in positions of power, like teachers, to be held criminally responsible, even if the student has reached the age of consent. That bill is still in process with the state legislature.

They filed separate lawsuits against the school, Fares in 2024 and Simon in 2025.

In the meantime, the DA’s office assigned a team of special prosecutors and state police detectives to revisit the evidence collected by the Pittsfield police and by the school’s law firm and concluded that Rutledge had “violated Massachusetts General Law.”

The DA’s office did not provide any further details about the evidence but stressed its investigation into Rutledge “as well as any suspected criminal conduct of other staff members at Miss Hall’s School” is ongoing.



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