• Biden illegal alien suspect charged in death of woman found slain on Un

    From Democrats Murdered This Woman@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 24 03:46:42 2024
    XPost: alt.education, atl.general, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    ATHENS, Ga. — A man charged in the death of a college student whose
    body was found Thursday on the campus of the University of Georgia
    committed a “crime of opportunity,” officials said Friday.

    University Police Chief Jeff Clark identified the suspect as Jose
    Antonio Ibarra, 26, of Athens. Clark said the suspect is not a U.S.
    citizen and did not attend the university.

    He said there was no indication that he knew 22-year-old Laken Hope
    Riley.

    Ibarra has been charged with malice murder, felony murder,
    aggravated battery, aggravated assault, false imprisonment,
    kidnapping, hindering a 911 call and concealing the death of
    another, police said. He was booked into the Clarke County Jail on
    Friday night.

    The suspect does not have an extensive violent criminal history,
    Clark said, adding that he “can’t say he has done this multiple
    times.”

    Clark described Riley’s killing as a “crime of opportunity, where he
    saw an individual and bad things happened,” and said the suspect is
    an “individual who woke up with bad intentions that day.” He said
    there is no motive.

    The killing appears to have been a solo act, and there were no
    indications of a continuing threat to the community, Clark said.

    Officials said that Riley, who was not a student at the University
    of Georgia but attended college at another institution in Athens,
    had gone for a jog and was later found dead with “visible injuries”
    in a forested area behind Lake Herrick on Thursday. Police said foul
    play was suspected, and on Friday, the case was called a homicide investigation.

    Police said Friday that Riley’s cause of death was blunt force
    trauma.

    Riley was a student at the Augusta University College of Nursing’s
    Athens campus, the school confirmed. Augusta University President
    Brooks A. Keel on Thursday called the news of the death “shocking to
    all of us.”

    In a statement Friday, the university said Riley was a junior and a
    dean’s list student.

    “This sudden loss of one of our students is truly heartbreaking,”
    the statement said, noting counseling support services are available
    for students, faculty and staff.

    The University of Georgia said Friday that Riley had been a student
    through the 2023 spring semester before transferring to Augusta
    University.

    In a message Thursday to the campus community, which includes more
    than 40,000 students, the University of Georgia called it a
    “terrible situation.”

    The investigation
    Police were on the scene at the Oconee Forest Park area of the
    Intramural Fields on campus Friday morning, the University of
    Georgia said.

    Around noon Thursday, someone reported that their friend had gone
    for a run at the Intramural Fields that morning and did not return,
    police said.

    The woman’s body was found behind Lake Herrick at 12:38 p.m., Clark
    said.

    Police announced Friday that they had arrested a suspect in
    connection with Riley’s death.

    Clark said police took “three or four” people into custody but are
    only arresting Ibarra, suggesting the “robust” evidence against him.

    Police were executing a search warrant on Ibarra’s apartment Friday
    to continue to collect evidence, Clark said. Despite the warrant, he
    said police didn’t need any further evidence beyond what they had
    already gathered to arrest the suspect.

    He said the arrest has been “supported by key input from the
    community, physical evidence and expert police work.” Video footage
    from the campus security system network was also vital in the
    investigation and eventual arrest, he said.

    Safety concerns over the lake
    Bridget Boswell, a 21-year-old junior at the University of Georgia,
    said Riley’s death made her feel “very sick to my stomach.”

    The news comes amid an intense time at the state’s flagship
    university. In addition to the unrelated death of another student
    earlier in the week, midterms are underway.

    Boswell described Lake Herrick as a haven for some on campus that is
    typically busy with students and locals.

    “I feel like it could have been anybody,” Boswell said. “I felt so comfortable at that lake in the past. Like I had taken naps in my
    hammock alone, which I would never do that now. I had such a sense
    of trust.”

    She said that she had been at the lake, where she often runs,
    Thursday morning.

    “I’ll go at any time … and there will be people from other schools,
    cross country teams practicing, it’s not just college students. I’ve
    seen people just walking their dogs there, like older people, and
    people will go there to fish as well,” she said. “I’ve noticed
    there’s a lot of older guys that will be there alone and I never
    really thought twice about it, and now I’m thinking about it and
    that makes me a little uncomfortable.”

    She suggested the university set up more emergency blue light phones
    as an added security measure.

    “I don’t see them anymore,” Boswell said. “I honestly think that
    that would be a big help in the right direction.”

    Michaela Gearty, a 22-year-old graduate student at UGA who also
    attended undergrad there, agreed that emergency call boxes should be reinstated. The school removed the emergency phone system in 2004
    over a lack of use.

    “There are no blue lights on the university campus anywhere,” she
    said. “They told us to download this app, UGA Safe app. But what
    they don’t realize is when you’re in a situation like that, talking
    about Laken, she was deep in the woods first off, and AT&T was out.
    So, what do you do there? There’s no blue light, no security,
    nothing.”

    Greg Trevor, a spokesman for UGA, said the university had the blue
    boxes on campus for eight years. In that time, they were used only
    seven times.

    In lieu of the blue boxes, Trevor said they developed the UGA Safe
    app, which includes a “Mobile BlueLight” feature that can call
    university police and share a caller’s location.

    Gearty noted that AT&T had experienced a service outage Thursday
    that left thousands of users unable to use their phones without Wi-
    Fi for hours.

    “This is all anyone’s talking about, and girls everywhere, including
    me and my roommates, we’ve been talking about this and strategizing
    on what to do being around here, being downtown, not going anywhere
    alone,” Gearty said.

    “The day before this happened, I went for a walk on campus alone.
    Now, I can’t do that anymore, which is really unfortunate, and
    neither can anyone else,” she said.

    Gearty said she never felt fully safe at the lake.

    “There’s so many wooded areas and places where people can kind of
    come from nowhere, anyone can access it,” she said.

    All classes were canceled Thursday evening and Friday, the
    university said. They will resume Monday.

    Clark said that there are security cameras on the campus, which
    covers 760 acres in Athens.

    He said Friday that the killing was a “very isolated incident,”
    noting that “we haven’t had a homicide at the University of Georgia
    in over 30 years.”

    Blayne Alexander and Charlie Gile reported from Athens, Marlene
    Lenthang from Los Angeles and Rebecca Cohen from New York City.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/foul-play-suspected-woman- went-jog-found-dead-university-georgia-rcna140123

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