Wednesday, June 19, 2013

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Colquitt Co. murder suspect pleads innocent
Posted: 07.30.2009 at 10:10 AM
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22-year-old Wilma Ann Yvonne Stover was arraigned in Colquitt County Superior Court

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A woman indicted in June in the 2004 slaying of five members of a Colquitt County family had her first court appearance in the case this week.

22-year-old Wilma Ann Yvonne Stover was arraigned in Colquitt County Superior Court.  Stover is accused in connection with the deaths of 25-year-old Jaime Cruz Resendez, 29-year-old Katrina Darlene Resendez, 30-year-old Lillianna Aguillar Rodriguez, 50-year-old Betty Watts, and 3-year-old Juan Carlos Resendez.

Prior to her return to Colquitt County, Stover, who lived In Nashville, Georgia, at the time of the November 8, 2004, slayings at a home on Adel Highway in Colquitt County, was serving time in federal custody on marijuana charges.

She was returned Tuesday to Colquitt County and will be housed in Thomas County in a separate facility from co-defendant Jerry Johnny Thompson, who is being held in Colquitt County.  Thompson was indicted in December 2006.

Stover had been held previously in a federal Community Corrections Management facility in Atlanta prior to her return to Southwest Georgia.  The Federal Bureau of Prisons website gave her expected release date in that conviction as Oct. 27, 2009.

On Wednesday, David Miller, district attorney for the Southern Judicial District, said he has decided not to seek the death penalty against Stover.

Miller had earlier declared his intent to seek the death penalty against Thompson, who also is serving a 27-year sentence federal prison sentence in another case.

Stover, who was indicted June 16 on five counts of felony murder, first appeared in a legal hearing Wednesday in which she entered a not-guilty plea.

Miller, who will serve as lead prosecutor in the case, said that the earliest possible trial date would come in November.  The next potential legal steps in the process would include Stover’s attorney filing a motion for bond and pre-trial motions.

Stover and Thompson cannot be tried in the same proceeding because death penalty trials must be held separately, Miller said.

He said he could not discuss at this time Stover’s alleged role in the slayings.

The last death penalty trial to occur in Colquitt County was in the early 1980s.

The bodies of the four family members and Rodriguez, a family friend and housekeeper, were found by a relative when he returned home from school.  All five had been shot to death.

Investigators have said that Jaime Resendez was involved with a marijuana ring that stretched from Texas to Moultrie.

 


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