Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Man indicted in death of nursing student Riley

- Jonathan Limehouse

A grand jury indicted the alleged killer of 22-year-old Laken Hope Riley, a nursing student whose body was found in February near running trails in a wooded area on the University of Georgia’s main campus in Athens, according to court records.

The indictment filed in Clarke County Superior Court charges Jose Antonio Ibarra, 26, with malice murder and accuses him of killing Riley “by inflicting blunt force trauma to her head and by asphyxiati­ng her in a manner unknown to the Grand Jurors.” The indictment also says Ibarra “disfigured (Riley’s) head by striking her multiple times with a rock.”

Ibarra was charged with 10 counts total, including malice murder, three counts of felony murder, kidnapping with bodily injury, aggravated assault with intent to rape, aggravated battery, obstructin­g or hindering a person making an emergency telephone call, tampering with evidence and peeping tom, according to the indictment.

The peeping tom charge stems from Ibarra allegedly spying through the window of a different person who lived in an apartment on the campus of the University of Georgia, the indictment says.

USA TODAY contacted Ibarra’s attorneys with the Athens Public Defender’s office but did not receive a response.

The University of Georgia Police investigat­ors said they identified Ibarra, an Athens resident, by looking at video footage from campus security. During a news conference in February, Chief Jeff Clark said Ibarra lived in one of the apartments near campus.

Authoritie­s also believe Ibarra’s actions were a “solo act,” and that he and Riley had no relationsh­ip, according to Clark.

“This was a crime of opportunit­y where he saw an individual and bad things happened,” the chief said.

Ibarra was arrested on Feb. 23 and taken to Clarke County Jail to be held without bond.

Riley, a former Georgia student, was enrolled as a junior at the Augusta University College of Nursing before she went missing on Feb. 22. Riley’s roommate reported her missing when she didn’t return around noon.

When school police officers found Riley, she was unconsciou­s, was not breathing and had “visible injuries.”

Paramedics pronounced her dead on the scene, Clark said.

Ibarra, a Venezuelan citizen, came to the U.S. in 2022. He was detained by authoritie­s who released him pending immigratio­n proceeding­s.

New York police charged Ibarra in August 2023 with a vehicle license violation and child endangerme­nt, according to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

Ibarra was driving a scooter without a license and had a child with him who didn’t have a helmet on, The New York Times reported, citing a law enforcemen­t official.

New York police released Ibarra before ICE could file a detainer, federal officials said.

Contributi­ng: Jeanine Santucci, Wayne Ford and Christophe­r Cann, USA TODAY

 ?? JOSHUA L. JONES/ATHENS BANNER HERALD FILE ?? University of Georgia Police Chief Jeff Clark has said that authoritie­s believe Jose Antonio Ibarra’s actions were a “solo act,” and that he and slain student Laken Riley had no relationsh­ip.
JOSHUA L. JONES/ATHENS BANNER HERALD FILE University of Georgia Police Chief Jeff Clark has said that authoritie­s believe Jose Antonio Ibarra’s actions were a “solo act,” and that he and slain student Laken Riley had no relationsh­ip.

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