Jose Ibarra isn’t just guilty of Laken Riley’s murder — he was also convicted of a host of other crimes. Ibarra was indicted on 10 counts involving two separate incidents — and on Wednesday, a judge agreed with the prosecution that Ibarra was guilty of each.
Here’s how prosecutor Sheila Ross described each charge and why Ibarra was guilty on all counts:
Malice murder: Ross outlined Ibarra’s clear intention to kill Riley, citing evidence and testimony from the medical examiner.
“He put huge holes in her head with a rock. And he did it more than once. And there could be no other reason to do that, other than to silence her forever,” the prosecutor said.
Ibarra also deprived Riley of oxygen long enough to cause wounds and “intended to kill her,” Ross said.
The medical examiner ruled Riley’s death to be a homicide caused by the combined effects of blunt-force head trauma and asphyxia.
3 counts of felony murder: A felony murder is a murder that takes place during the commission of another felony. In Ibarra’s case, prosecutors successfully argued he committed several other felonies during his encounter with Riley.
Kidnapping with bodily injury: When Ibarra confronted Riley as she was jogging in UGA’s Oconee Forest Park, “He took her 64 feet and 11 inches off the trail for the purpose of victimizing her,” Ross said. “That actual felony precedes the murder in time.” Ross also detailed Riley’s spate of bodily injuries, including a fractured skull.
Aggravated assault with attempt to rape: When Riley’s body was found, her breasts were exposed, all three layers of her top clothing were pulled up, her leggings were pulled down, her underwear was torn and pulled outside of her tights, the prosecution said.
“The only thing that makes sense about why these two individuals — these two individuals who don’t know each other, never met each other, had this encounter on this trail at this moment while Laken is out for her morning jog — is because he wanted to sexually assault her,” Ross said.
Aggravated battery: Prosecutors said Riley had a depressed skull fracture on the left side of her head, and part of her skull is in her brain. Riley also suffered eight lacerations to her head.
“I really don’t need to say anything else,” Ross said. “He is guilty of aggravated battery.”
Obstructing a person making an emergency call: A police sergeant gave a heartbreaking account of Riley’s final cell phone communications from the morning she died. Records showed Riley made a 911 call, but the call got disconnected. A 911 operator tried to call Riley back twice, but she didn’t answer her phone.
Ross said the evidence proves Ibarra was the one who disconnected Riley’s 911 call.
“It is no coincidence that his thumbprint is on her phone where you would go to hang up an iPhone,” she said. In addition, “Her phone is separated from her body.”
Tampering with evidence: Video footage from a neighbor’s doorbell camera showed Ibarra tossing key pieces of evidence near his apartment the morning Riley was killed, Ross said.
“He’s throwing away the bloody jacket. He’s throwing away the bloody gloves,” she said.
Bodycam footage from a police officer who climbed into a dumpster captures his shock when he found the discarded jacket:
“Oh sh*t. There’s hair on the buttons. … women’s long hair wrapped up in the buttons,” Athens-Clarke County Police officer Zachary Davis said.
Hair from the jacket was found to be “microscopically consistent” with Laken Riley’s hair, a crime lab analyst testified. And a blood-like stain on the navy blue jacket found in the dumpster contained the DNA of Riley and Ibarra, a forensic DNA expert testified.
Peeping Tom charge: Before attacking Riley, Ibarra peered into the apartment of a UGA student and tried to open her door repeatedly, Ross said.
The graduate student, who testified off-camera in court, was “unnerved” by the incident, Ross said.
Ibarra “had been outside her apartment for an hour,” Ross said. “She’s in the shower, and that’s when he (Ibarra) decides to try to open her door again.”
The student called police and said the man outside her door had ducked, Ross said. Campus security footage corroborated the students’ account, she added.