The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Spalding man pleads guilty in 1983 murder

William ‘Bill’ Moore gets 30 years in stabbing, truck dragging of man.

- By Alexis Stevens astevens@ajc.com

William “Bill” Moore pleaded guilty to involvemen­t in murder of Timothy Coggins and was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

It took nearly 35 years, but justice has been served for 23-yearold Timothy Coggins, who was stabbed 30 times and dragged on a chain behind a pickup truck.

On Thursday, William “Bill” Moore pleaded guilty to his involvemen­t in the murder and was sentenced to 30 years in prison, including 20 to serve. Moore’s plea came six weeks after his brother-in-law was convicted in a Spalding County courtroom.

“This has been a team effort from the beginning,” the Spalding County Sheriff ’s Office posted on its Facebook page. “We promised that we all would fight this fight as hard as we could to the very end to get justice for Timo- thy and his family. We kept that promise, finished the fight, and we will continue to stand by and support the Coggins family.”

But Coggins’ brutal killing wasn’t always a priority for inves- tigators. Two months after he was killed, the case was closed with little publicity.

“At one point they were pulled off to investigat­e a mailbox that had been destroyed,” Griffin Judicial Circuit District Attorney Benjamin Coker said in his closing argument in Gebhardt’s trial. “Timothy Coggins was just another dead black man.”

The case was reopened in December 2016, and a crucial tip came in the following March. Even more tips followed, and Spalding deputies and GBI investigat­ors spoke with more than 60 people. In October, Gebhardt and Moore were arrested and charged with murder.

Three others were charged with obstructio­n, but Sheriff Darrell Dix said those charges related to conduct after the case was reopened.

Investigat­ors used a Hydrovac system to excavate a well on Moore’s property, the first time the system had been used for that purpose in Georgia, Coker said.

In the well, investigat­ors found several pieces of evidence, including a white tank top, shoes, a chain and a knife.

In an emailed statement Thursday, Coker thanked the investigat­ors whose efforts helped solve the case.

“Today marks the end of a long and arduous journey for the family of Timothy Coggins,” Coker said.

“My heartfelt thanks goes out to law enforcemen­t for their work on the case. May Timothy rest in peace, and may his family begin to heal.”

The Coggins family could not immediatel­y be reached for comment. But immediatel­y after Gebhardt was convicted in June, Coggins’ niece described the family’s struggle over the years as the case went cold.

“We never thought that we would be here. We thought Tim had been forgotten,” Heather Coggins said. “To get a guilty verdict? We have been elated.”

At the time, she pledged family members would be back in the courtroom in August for Moore’s trial.

Now they won’t need to be.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@ AJC.COM 2017 ?? William “Bill” Moore, shown at a 2017 hearing in Spalding County, pleaded guilty Thursday to involvemen­t in the 1983 murder of Timothy Coggins.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@ AJC.COM 2017 William “Bill” Moore, shown at a 2017 hearing in Spalding County, pleaded guilty Thursday to involvemen­t in the 1983 murder of Timothy Coggins.

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