Prosecution rests in trial over death of Georgia nursing student Laken
Riley
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[November 20, 2024]
By KATE BRUMBACK
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Prosecutors finished calling witnesses Tuesday in the
trial of the man accused of killing Georgia nursing student Laken Riley,
and the defense began presenting its case but quickly ran into snags.
Jose Ibarra, 26, is charged with murder and other crimes in Riley’s
February death. He waived his right to a jury trial, meaning the case
will be decided alone by Athens-Clarke County Superior Court Judge H.
Patrick Haggard.
The Feb. 22 killing on the University of Georgia campus added fuel to
the national debate over immigration when federal authorities said
Ibarra illegally entered the U.S. in 2022 and was allowed to stay in the
country while he pursued his immigration case. Riley, 22, was a student
at Augusta University College of Nursing, which also has a campus in
Athens, about 70 miles (115 kilometers) east of Atlanta.
The prosecution rested its case Tuesday afternoon after calling more
than a dozen law enforcement officers, Riley’s roommate and a woman who
lived in an apartment with Ibarra to testify. The judge then asked
Ibarra if he wants to testify and he said no.
Defense attorneys planned to call Ibarra's brother, Diego Ibarra, to
testify. Throughout the trial they asked prosecution witnesses questions
that seem designed to create doubt about Jose Ibarra's guilt by
suggesting that his brother, Diego, could not be excluded as a suspect.
Diego Ibarra pleaded guilty in July to federal charges of possessing a
fraudulent green card and is in federal immigration detention awaiting
sentencing. Dressed in orange jail scrubs and with his wrists and ankles
chained, he entered the courtroom and took the stand Tuesday afternoon.
But then one of Jose Ibarra's defense attorneys, John Donnelly, told the
judge that he'd just found out Diego Ibarra has a new attorney for his
immigration case. He said he spoke to the attorney by phone and the
attorney was two hours away but said he would advise his client not to
testify.
Donnelly said he could call another immigration detainee who could
testify about statements Diego Ibarra had made while in detention. But
the judge said that could run into hearsay concerns. Since it was
already late in the day, he decided to let the lawyers work things out
overnight and to resume the trial Wednesday morning.
Earlier Tuesday, University of Georgia police Sgt. Sophie Raboud, who
examined data from Riley’s phone, walked through a timeline of activity
on Riley's phone the morning she died and read text messages aloud.
Riley called her mother at 9:03 a.m. that morning, and by the time her
mother called back about 20 minutes later, the student had encountered
Jose Ibarra on a wooded running trail, according to trial testimony.
Prosecutors have said Ibarra killed Riley after a struggle, and data
from Riley’s smartwatch shows her heart stopped beating at 9:28 a.m.
After Riley failed to answer the phone, her mother, Allyson Phillips,
texted her several times, casually at first but then with increasing
concern, according to data pulled from Riley’s phone.
At 9:37 a.m., her mother texted, “Call me when you can.” Phillips called
twice, and when her calls went unanswered, she texted her daughter at
9:58 a.m., “You’re making me nervous not answering while you’re out
running. Are you OK?” Phillips texted again at 11:47 a.m., writing,
“Please call me. I’m worried sick about you.” She and other family
members continued to call Riley.
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Jose Ibarra appears at his trial at the Athens-Clarke County
Superior Court on Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024, in Athens, Ga. (Arvin
Temkar/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)
Raboud also testified about video from surveillance cameras near the
wooded trail, and Phillips and some other family members and friends
cried as video played showing Riley running on the trail in her
final moments.
Prosecutor Sheila Ross said during her opening statement that Ibarra
had gone out “hunting for females” that morning in February and that
he killed Riley after a struggle when she “refused to be his rape
victim.” Law enforcement officers testified there was no evidence
that Riley was sexually assaulted.
Dr. Michelle DiMarco, a GBI medical examiner, conducted the autopsy
of Riley's body and testified that Riley had injuries, including
scrapes, bruises and cuts, to her head, neck, torso, abdomen, left
hand and left leg. Her injuries included eight cuts to her head,
including one that fractured her skull, DiMarco said.
Prosecutors have said that Ibarra hit Riley in the head with a rock
and DiMarco said the injuries “could be consistent with a rock.” A
GBI specialist testified Riley's DNA was found on two rocks at the
scene.
The DNA specialist, Ashley Hinkle, also testified that testing
showed that a blue jacket that police recovered from a trash bin at
Ibarra's apartment complex had a blood stain that tested positive
for Riley's DNA and that Ibarra's DNA was also on it. Ibarra's DNA
was also found under the fingernails of Riley's right hand.
Defense attorney Dustin Kirby said in his opening that Riley’s death
was a tragedy and called the evidence in the case graphic and
disturbing. But he said there is not sufficient evidence to prove
that his client killed Riley.
Defense attorneys called three other witnesses before trying to put
Diego Ibarra on the stand. One was a woman who lived next door to
the Ibarras. Stephanie Slaton testified that the evening of the day
Riley was killed, Diego Ibarra asked her what was going on because
there were a lot of police around.
Slaton testified that she told him someone had been killed nearby
and urged him to tell police anything he knew. She said he spoke
into a translation app on his phone and showed her the screen, which
said, “If you tell them, I will tell them you did it and then I will
kill you, too.”
But under questioning by Ross, Slaton said Diego Ibarra never told
her he or his brother had killed Riley. She also acknowledged she’d
been drinking that day and that she had been involved in an intimate
relationship with Diego Ibarra and had been angry at him because she
thought he was also involved with another woman.
A police officer called to testify by the defense said he found a
pile of discarded clothing near the Ibarra's apartment complex the
day after the killing but that it looked like it had been there a
while. The defense also called a man who'd been out running the day
Riley was killed and saw a suspicious man but described him as being
taller and skinnier than Jose Ibarra.
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