WARNING: GRAPHIC
ATHENS, Ga. – Jose Ibarra, the suspect charged in Augusta University student Laken Riley’s February murder on the University of Georgia campus, appeared in court Friday for the start of his trial.
Ibarra, a 26-year-old illegal immigrant from Venezuela, allegedly attacked and killed Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student, while she was jogging along trails near Lake Herrick on UGA’s campus the morning of Feb. 22.
Two security guards escorted Ibarra into the Athens-Clarke County courtroom around 7:30 a.m. Friday, about an hour and a half before the start of the trial at 9 a.m., wearing a blue plaid shirt and gray dress pants with shackles around his wrists.
Just before the start of the trial, approximately 20 members of Riley’s family entered the courtroom wearing solemn expressions.
WATCH: Hear Laken Riley’s 911 phone call played in courtroom
“[H]e went hunting for females on the University of Georgia campus,”
“On Feb. 22, Jose Ibarra put on a black hat, a hoodie-style jacket, and some black kitchen-style disposable gloves, and he went hunting for females on the University of Georgia campus,” prosecutor Sheila Ross said in her opening statement Friday. Riley’s sister teared up upon hearing Ross’ first statements.
Ross said Ibarra then encountered Riley on her typical morning run and attacked her.
“When Laken Riley refused to be his rape victim, he bashed her head in with a rock repeatedly,” Ross said.
The suspect is charged with 10 counts total, including one count of malice murder, three counts of felony murder, one count of kidnapping, one count of aggravated assault with intent to rape, one count of aggravated battery, one count of hindering a 911 call, one count of tampering with evidence and one count of being a “peeping Tom.” Ibarra has pleaded not guilty to all counts.
ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT CHARGED IN LAKEN RILEY MURDER ‘FAST-TRACKING’ TO LIFE IN PRISON: ATTORNEY
On Tuesday, Judge Patrick Haggard granted Ibarra’s request for a bench trial over a jury trial, meaning evidence will be presented in court only to Haggard rather than before a selected jury.
Ibarra and his brothers, also in the United States illegally from Venezuela, lived in an apartment building less than a half mile from the on-campus park where Riley was running.
The defendant’s attorney, Dustin Kirby, argued in his opening statement that evidence would not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Ibarra killed Riley. He said it would take “gymnastics” for the prosecution to argue that Ibarra killed Riley with what he described as “circumstantial evidence.”
“[T]here should not be enough evidence to convince you beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Ibarra is guilty of the crimes charged.”
“We waived a jury trial in this case, with the hope and trust that despite the nature of this evidence that you could come to a verdict that was not just a way of of easing this family’s suffering, but it was based on an impartial and honest assessment of the evidence in this case,” he said. “If that happens, and the presumption of innocence is respected, there should not be enough evidence to convince you beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Ibarra is guilty of the crimes charged.”
Ibarra allegedly murdered the aspiring nurse in what UGA Police Chief Jeffrey Clark described as a “crime of opportunity.”
Riley left home for her morning run at 9:03 a.m. on the morning of Feb. 22. By 9:11 a.m., Ross said, Riley called 911, which dispatch answered, but there was no response from Riley.
The 911 call was played aloud in court Friday. The call was mostly silent, with a dispatch operator saying, “Clarke County 911, can anyone hear me?” but no voices could be heard responding. The only sounds over the course of the seconds-long call were birds chirping and a quiet sound toward the end of the call.
Riley’s roommates noticed she had not returned from her run, and they went to search for her around at 11:31 a.m. At 11:46, they found one of Riley’s AirPods on the ground near her usual running path and her last known location, which they knew by using the “Find My Friends” IPhone app.
Riley’s roommate, Sofia Magana, testified that she had taken a photo of the area where she picked up Riley’s AirPod when she and their other roommate, Lilly Steiner, went out to look for her along the trails near her last known location on the morning of Feb. 22. The two students reported her missing to UGA campus police shortly after noon on Feb. 22.
The prosecution played the call aloud in court while hearing testimony from Riley’s roommate, Lilly Steiner.
“Our roommate went out for a run at 9 . . . and we haven’t heard from her,” Steiner can be heard saying during the call. “We went to where her last known location was, and all we found is an AirPod.”
At 12:37, UGA PD Sgt. Kenneth Maxwell found Laken unconscious and not breathing. She was partially naked and covered in leaves. Authorities also noticed severe injuries to the side of her head, and prosecutors believe Riley’s body had been moved after her death; investigators located her body in a wooded area approximately 50 feet from the main running trail.
WATCH: UGA POLICE BODYCAM PLAYED DURING TRIAL
Maxwell’s police bodycam footage from the moment he found Riley’s body was played in court, and Judge Haggard gave those present in the courtroom the opportunity to leave. Riley’s mother departed the courtroom while her stepfather, father and sister remained seated.
The footage showed Sgt. Maxwell locating Riley, whose head was covered in leaves, and attempting to perform CPR on her. Maxwell says in the bodycam video that it appeared as through Riley had been attacked. Multiple members of Riley’s family cried quietly in court as the footage was played, as Ibarra repeatedly looked at and away from the video.
“At that point, I suspected this wasn’t an accident, based on the circumstances,” Maxwell testified.
Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) Special Agent Daniella Stuart, the state’s sixth witness on Friday, said she had analyzed and photographed the crime scene around 2 p.m. on Feb. 22. The graphic photographs displayed in court showed Riley’s injured torso and head. Riley’s family was not present in the courtroom during Stuart’s testimony.
“Some kind of significant disturbance happened in that area,” Stuart testified while describing blood stains and hair on a rock near the area where officials had discovered Riley’s body.
The special agent confirmed that she had observed a latent print on the bottom of Riley’s iPhone, near the area where someone would hang up a call using their finger.
Investigators with the Athens-Clarke County Police Department, UGA and the FBI immediately began searching for suspects. On the evening of Feb. 22, investigators with all involved entities went “dumpster diving” around the area where RIley had been killed, searching for evidence, Ross said.
The prosecutor described their findings that night as “a combination of good police work and luck.”
At a dumpster near the apartment complex where Ibarra lived, an officer found a “suspicious” dark sweatshirt with hair and blood on it. Authorities immediately submitted the sweatshirt to a lab for testing.
Officer Zachary Davis, the state’s seventh witness to testify Friday, said he had been checking dumpsters at apartment complexes around the UGA trails where Riley had been found. In one dumpster, he noticed the dark sweatshirt and then physically went into the dumpster, which had been labeled as strictly for recyclable items, to get a better look at the article just before 10 p.m. on Feb. 22. Davis’ police-worn bodycam footage shows him locating the item and putting it in an evidence bag.
“There’s hair on the buttons, ripped up sleeves,” Davis can be heard telling his fellow officers. He can then be heard asking them, “Was she a brunette?”
An apartment nearby had a doorbell video camera with a view of the dumpster, and around 9:40 a.m. on Feb. 22, the camera captured a man disposing of something in the dumpster. A woman living in Ibarra’s apartment, Rosbeli Flores-Bello, would later identify the man in the video as Ibarra.
Investigators would later test the recovered jacket for DNA evidence and find a combination of both Jose Ibarra’s and Riley’s DNA on the items.
Investigators would also find Ibarra’s DNA beneath Riley’s fingernails, Ross said. The suspect had bruising and scratches throughout his body at the time of his arrest, according to Ross and Special Agent Stuart, who photographed his injuries.
The peeping Tom charge stems from another Feb. 22 incident in which the suspect allegedly went to a residence on UGA’s campus in Athens and “peeped through” a window and “spied upon” a university staff member, according to the indictment.
Ross said a male individual had been captured on video camera footage trying to open a UGA graduate student’s door around 7 a.m. on the same morning that Riley was killed. Evidence showed that the individual haad gone to the student’s door “six times” and peeped through the student’s open windows, Ross said in her opening statement. The student called 911 at 7:57 a.m. that morning and reported hearing someone trying to “break into” her apartment.
Prior to the peeping Tom incident, an individual matching the suspect’s description appeared on surveillance video footage holding a white cup, Ross said in her opening statement. UGA PD Lt. Daniel Saunders, the state’s eighth witness, testified on Friday afternoon that he had located a white cup near a large rock by the crime scene containing contents that smelled of alcohol.
Ibarra illegally crossed into the United States through El Paso, Texas, in September 2022 and was released into the U.S. via parole, ICE and DHS sources previously told Fox News.
His older brother, Diego Ibarra, who worked briefly in a UGA cafeteria before his arrest in February, is charged with green card fraud and had ties to a known Venezuelan gang in the U.S. called Tren de Aragua, according to federal court documents.
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ICE previously confirmed to Fox News Digital that Jose Ibarra had been arrested by the New York Police Department a year after he entered the U.S. in August 2023 and had been “charged with acting in a manner to injure a child less than 17 and a motor vehicle license violation.”
Fox News’ Adam Shaw contributed to this report.