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Mental health evaluation ordered for ex-UGA student’s convicted killer
Mental health evaluation ordered for ex-UGA student’s convicted killer
Mental health evaluation ordered for ex-UGA student’s convicted killer

Published on: 07/08/2025

Description

ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) - Jose Ibarra - the man who was convicted of killing a former University of Georgia student and whose trial and conviction set off a national immigration debate during a presidential election year - has been ordered to undergo a mental health examination.

Athens-Clarke County Superior Court Judge Patrick Haggard, who oversaw Ibarra’s bench trial and sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole, has ordered the state Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities to conduct the exam using a certified Spanish interpreter.

This past November, Ibarra was found guilty in the Feb. 22, 2024, murder of Laken Riley, whose body was found on the University of Georgia campus after she went missing following a morning run.

Riley was a nursing student at Augusta University at the time of her death.

Ibarra was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on one count of malice murder; life in prison without the possibility of parole on one kidnapping charge; 20 years on one count of aggravated assault; 12 months in a county jail on one count of hindering an emergency telephone call; 12 months in a county jail on one count of tampering with evidence; and five years in prison on one count of Peeping Tom.

Ibarra, a Venezuelan immigrant who had entered the United States illegally, had waived his right to a jury trial, meaning Haggard heard and decided the case.

Haggard’s order, filed July 3, 2025, in the Superior Court of Athens-Clarke County, instructs the department to determine if Ibarra was “capable of understanding the nature and object of pretrial proceedings, including waiver of jury trial rights.”

Less than a month after their client’s conviction, Ibarra’s attorneys filed a motion for a new trial. In their motion, Ibarra’s legal counsel said the verdict was “contrary to law” and “contrary to evidence.”

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News Source : https://www.walb.com/2025/07/08/mental-health-evaluation-ordered-ex-uga-students-convicted-killer/

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