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Sugar Cookie

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A 26-year-old migrant from Venezuela has been charged in the death of a 22-year-old female jogger.

Laken Riley's death has been attributed to blunt force trauma to the head.

Jose Antonio who is in the country illegally entered the US illegally in El Paso, Texas, on Sept. 8, 2022, with his wife and her son seeking asylum, and was later released “for further processing,” ICE said

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Laken Riley, 22, died from blunt force trauma to the head, according to the Athens-Clarke County Coroner’s Office and Morgue. The coroner’s office said it will be several weeks until the official autopsy report is released.

Riley was found dead on Thursday, Feb. 22 in a wooded area behind Lake Herrick with “visible injuries.” UGA police said foul play was suspected in her death.
Jose Antonio Ibarra, 26, was charged with malice and felony murder and several other charges in connection to Riley’s death
 
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Police Seargent Dan Jackson told reporters. "Due to the nature of the situation, we highly recommend women avoid jogging by themselves within at least 2,000 miles of any open border."

"Again, we refer the public to mainstream media reports reassuring the public that this incident had nothing to do with illegal immigration and that it's mostly the fault of women who think they can just leave their houses without putting themselves in danger. It's definitely not the stream of who-knows-who coming across our southern border."

From @Ella Mayo's 2nd link.
 

Hundreds gather as slain Georgia nursing student Laken Riley laid to rest: ‘She was a gift’​

Nursing student Laken Riley was mourned at a funeral in her hometown on Friday, one week after she was killed — allegedly by an illegal migrant — while jogging on the University of Georgia campus.

Riley, 22, was commemorated with a 2 p.m. funeral service at Woodstock City Church in Woodstock, Ga., FOX 5 Atlanta reported.

The streets around the church were clogged with cars as what appeared to be hundreds of people braved the rain to pay tribute to the jogger, photos from the Daily Mail showed.

The family received visitors for two hours ahead of the service, Riley’s online obituary noted.
 
The suspect accused of murdering Laken Riley on the University of Georgia's campus was found guilty by a judge on all charges Wednesday, including malice murder and felony murder.
He was sentenced by the judge to life in prison without the possibility of parole, the maximum possible.
Prosecutors called the evidence against the suspect "overwhelming," while the defense raised the theory that the defendant could be an accomplice but not the killer during closing arguments in his trial.
Jose Ibarra, 26, was accused of killing the 22-year-old nursing student while she was out for a run after prosecutors said she "refused to be his rape victim." Jose Ibarra, an undocumented migrant, was charged with malice murder and felony murder in connection with her death, which became a rallying cry for immigration reform.
Jose Ibarra waived his right to a jury trial and the case was presented over four days in the Athens-Clarke County courtroom to Judge H. Patrick Haggard, who rendered the verdict on Wednesday shortly after closing arguments in the trial.
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He should have been given the death penalty. Why should the tax payers have to house and feed this Venezuelan roach for the rest of his life.

 
A judge has ordered a mental evaluation of the Venezuelan man convicted of killing Georgia nursing student Laken Riley.

A judge in November found Jose Ibarra guilty of murder and other crimes in Riley's February 2024 killing and sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Ibarra is seeking a new trial, and his lawyers asked the judge to order a mental evaluation as part of that process.

Clarke County Superior Court Judge H. Patrick Haggard's order for a mental evaluation was sent to the state Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities Tuesday, according to a letter filed with the court.

In a court filing last month, Ibarra's post-conviction attorneys, James Luttrell and David Douds, said they believe Ibarra suffers from “congenital deficiency” that could make him “incapable of preparing a defense and standing trial." Ibarra “lacks the mental capacity" to understand the proceedings, and his attorney wrote that he believes that was the case at the time of the killing and at the time of trial.

Ibarra, 27, had waived his right to a jury trial, meaning it was up to Athens-Clarke County Superior Court Judge H. Patrick Haggard alone to hear and decide the case.

“A criminal defendant must personally and intelligently participate in the waiver of the constitutional right to a trial by jury,” Luttrell and Douds wrote, noting that Ibarra's trial attorney did not ask for a competency evaluation

Prosecutor Sheila Ross wrote in a court filing responding to the request that there were “no challenges or concerns” about Ibarra's competency prior to trial and that “there is nothing in the trial record that would suggest that Defendant was not competent during his trial.” But she wrote that she does not oppose the request for a competency evaluation.

Haggard last week filed an order asking the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities to evaluate Ibarra with the aid of a Spanish-language interpreter.

He asked for findings on whether Ibarra was capable of understanding the pretrial proceedings involving the waiver of his right to a jury trial, as well as the trial itself, and whether he was capable of assisting his attorney to prepare his defense. He also wants to know whether Ibarra understands the post-conviction proceedings and can aid in preparing his defense.


So what exactly does his lawyer want him to be release to kill another woman or girl?
 
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NAME: IBARRA, JOSE ANTONIO​


INCARCERATION DETAILS​


MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: SPECIAL MANAGEMENT UNIT
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: LIFE, W/O PAROLE

STATE OF GEORGIA - CURRENT SENTENCES​

CASE NO: 939177
OFFENSE: HINDER ER TELEPHONE CALL
CONVICTION COUNTY: CLARKE COUNTY
CRIME COMMIT DATE: 02/22/2024
SENTENCE LENGTH: 0 YEARS, 12 MONTHS, 0 DAYS

CASE NO: 939177
OFFENSE: KIDNAPPING
CONVICTION COUNTY: CLARKE COUNTY
CRIME COMMIT DATE: 02/22/2024
SENTENCE LENGTH: NOT AVAILABLE

CASE NO: 939177
OFFENSE: TAMPERING WITH EVIDENCE
CONVICTION COUNTY: CLARKE COUNTY
CRIME COMMIT DATE: 02/22/2024
SENTENCE LENGTH: 0 YEARS, 12 MONTHS, 0 DAYS

CASE NO: 939177
OFFENSE: PEEPING TOM
CONVICTION COUNTY: CLARKE COUNTY
CRIME COMMIT DATE: 02/22/2024
SENTENCE LENGTH: 5 YEARS, 0 MONTHS, 0 DAYS

CASE NO: 939177
OFFENSE: AGG ASLT W INTNT TO RAPE
CONVICTION COUNTY: CLARKE COUNTY
CRIME COMMIT DATE: 02/22/2024
SENTENCE LENGTH: 20 YEARS, 0 MONTHS, 0 DAYS

CASE NO: 939177
OFFENSE: MURDER
CONVICTION COUNTY: CLARKE COUNTY
CRIME COMMIT DATE: 02/22/2024
SENTENCE LENGTH: NOT AVAILABLE


STATE OF GEORGIA - PRIOR SENTENCES​


STATE OF GEORGIA - INCARCERATION HISTORY​


INCARCERATION BEGIN: 11/22/2024


Ibarra waived his right to a jury trial and opted for a bench trial, which began on November 15, 2024. Prosecutors presented evidence that included Ibarra's DNA under Riley's fingernails and Ibarra's fingerprint on Riley's phone screen. Ibarra's defense said that evidence against him was circumstantial

On November 20, 2024, Judge Haggard found him guilty of all charges and sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Ibarra's attorneys filed a motion before Judge Haggard for a new trial, arguing that his rights were violated by the court's failure to delay the trial so that the defense's expert could review the DNA evidence and the court refusing to exclude some cellphone evidence. This motion was denied on 9 March 2026, with Judge Haggard writing that the evidence against Ibarra was "overwhelming and powerful", and granting the delay would not have affected the verdict.

 
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