Orlando Sentinel

Mental evaluation ordered for suspect in woman’s death

- By Krista Torralva

The competency of a man suspected of killing an Altamonte Springs woman was called into question during a brief court hearing Friday.

Scott Edward Nelson smiled and spoke with his lawyer in an Orlando courtroom before U.S. Magistrate Judge Karla Spaulding ordered Nelson be committed to the U.S. Attorney General’s custody for a mental health evaluation in a medical center.

Spaulding found “reasonable cause to believe (Nelson) may be suffering from a disease or defect that affects his competency,” she said in court.

The order puts the federal case against Nelson on hold and may also delay state charges related to the death of Jennifer Lynn Fulford.

Defense attorney Dan Eckhart filed a motion Thursday requesting Nelson receive a psychiatri­c or psychologi­cal examinatio­n. Nelson, 53, told law enforcemen­t things about his current mental health “that raise legitimate concerns,” the motion states.

Eckhart told reporters after the hearing there were about two or three things that may show his mental state. U.S. attorneys did not oppose the request.

Fulford, 56, disappeare­d last week “under suspicious circumstan­ces” in Winter Park, where she worked as a family’s caretaker. Winter Park police launched a search for Fulford. Her body was discovered in a wooded area off Apopka-Vineland Road Sept. 30.

Winter Park police called Nelson a suspect. He was arrested in a Jacksonvil­le hotel Sunday on violations of his probation from a 2010 bank robbery in Daytona Beach.

Nelson, who Eckhart said worked for a painter, failed to notify supervisor­s of his changes in residency and employment, according to court documents. Spaulding said in court Nelson is also facing charges of third degree grand theft auto, theft of a credit card and unlawful use of personal identifica­tion in Orange County courts.

Nelson has not been charged in Fulford’s death.

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