Nursing student Laken Riley’s mother sobbed as the chilling 911 call made moments before her death was revealed during the trial of an illegal migrant accused of killing her.
Allyson Phillips covered her face with a tissue and broke down as the Athens-Clark County court was told that 22-year-old Riley somehow managed to activate the SOS alert on her phone at 9.11am the day of her death.
Prosecutors allege in that moment on February 22, 26-year-old undocumented migrant Jose Antonio Ibarra stopped her in her tracks as she went for a run near the University of Georgia campus.
The court heard he was ‘hunting for females’ but Riley ‘refused to be his rape victim’, prompting a vicious attack which left her dead 18 minutes after that call.
In the muffled audio, a dispatch officer was heard repeatedly stating: ‘Clark County 911. Hello, Clark County 911. Can anyone hear me?’
Riley never answered. Prosecutors claim a male voice can be faintly heard in the short call, which is disconnected after just one minute.
The dispatch officer attempted to call back, but there was no answer.
As Ibarra stared stony-faced ahead, Phillips was overcome by emotion. Riley’s stepdad sat beside her in the courtroom on Friday morning, and also looked emotional as the court heard crucial evidence in the case.
Later, distressing bodycam footage from the officer who found Riley’s body was played in court.
Phillips was among a handful of onlookers who excused themselves as it was played. Riley’s stepfather, John, covered his face at various points of the video.
In the video, Sergeant Kenneth Maxwell, from the University of Georgia Police Department, found her body partially hidden in bushland off the main running trail.
He performed CPR despite noting she was ‘stiff’ and did not have a pulse. ‘Looks like blunt force trauma to the head,’ he said.
Ibarra, from Venezuela, arrived in the United States from via El Paso, Texas, illegally in 2022 but was paroled for ‘further processing.’ His arrest in this case sparked renewed debate about the border crisis and illegal migration.
According to a smartwatch which was tracking Riley’s heartbeat on the run, she died at 9.28am. Police allege she was beaten in the head with a rock.
Just 23 minutes before her death, she was pictured for the last time on CCTV near her house, running with her phone in hand.
Georgia special prosecutor Sheila Ross had earlier flashed the last known photograph of Ibarra’s alleged victim across the screen.
The picture was taken on CCTV cameras near her home on the University of Georgia campus at 9.05am on the day of her death.
She was holding her iPhone in her left hand, wearing activewear and her noise-canceling AirPods.
‘The evidence will show that Laken fought,’ Ross said. ‘She fought for her life. She fought for her dignity.’
In opening statements on Friday morning, she said: ‘When Laken Riley refused to be his rape victim, he bashed her skull in with a rock, repeatedly.’
Ross claimed there was significant forensic evidence left behind tying the crime to Ibarra.
In opening statements on Friday morning, she said: ‘When Laken Riley refused to be his rape victim, he bashed her skull in with a rock, repeatedly.’
‘In her fight, she caused this defendent to leave forensic evidence behind,’ she said.
‘She marked her killer for the entire world to see. It is his DNA. Only his DNA, underneath Laken’s right fingernails… He left behind his thumbprint on her iPhone, which was found near her body at the crime scene.’
Ross said the forensic evidence alone should be enough to warrant a guilty verdict.
The court heard that Ibarra’s DNA was a direct match to the DNA under Riley’s fingernails, and was ’10 billion times more probable than a coincidental match.’
Beyond that, she revealed there is digital and video evidence tying Ibarra to the crime.
In particular, CCTV footage identified Ibarra as he dumped a bloody jacket in a dumpster near his home, 15 minutes after Riley’s heart stopped.
That jacket was later seized and taken for forensic testing, revealing a mixture of Riley’s DNA and Ibarra’s DNA.
Long, brunette strands of hair were wrapped around a button on the jacket which were ‘consistent with Riley’s hair and forcibly removed from her head.’
Riley’s body was found less than an hour after she was reported missing, near a lake on the University of Georgia campus. She’d been a student there until 2023, when she transferred to Augusta.
Her roommates reported her missing after becoming concerned that she had been out for longer than usual.
They begin walking her usual running route, using Find My Friends to track where she may be. It was while walking the route they noticed that, according to the tracking data, she had not moved for hours.
They reached the location where her last location had pinged, and found one of her Airpods on the ground.
The duo took a photo to note where they found it, and then picked it up, returned home to reconnect to WiFi and called police to report Riley missing.
‘Even with her digital profile… it took about 25 minutes for [the officer] to locate her,’ Ross said.
‘This is a very forested area, she was off the running trail… She was hidden under a tree’ and covered in foliage.
The court heard that her breasts were exposed and her underwear was forcibly torn. A 𝑠e𝑥ual assault and rape kit returned a negative result.
She had suffered ‘severe injuries’ to her head, and the officer ‘could tell she was dead. She was cold.’
There is no evidence the duo knew one another, police allege. They described the crime as one of ‘opportunity.’
But Ibarra’s defense maintain there is not enough evidence to convict him beyond a reasonable doubt.
Attorney for Ibarra Dustin Kirby began his opening statements by accepting that Riley’s death was a horrible tragedy.
‘The evidence in this case is very good that Laken Riley was murdered,’ he said. ‘
The evidence that Jose Ibarra killed Laken Riley is circumstantial. The evidence that anyone had any intent or certainly committed any 𝑠e𝑥ual assault is speculation.’
Kirby said evidence linking Ibarra to Riley in particular ‘is lacking’ and could not be proven beyond doubt.
If ‘the presumption of innocence is respected, there should not be enough evidence to convince [the judge] beyond a reasonable doubt, that Mr. Ibarra is guilty of the crimes charged,’ he said.
Ibarra had previous run-ins with law enforcement since arriving in the United States illegally.
He was paroled in 2022 for ‘further processing’ after entering America, and was then arrested in New York City in September 2013. Police allegedly released him ‘before a detainer could be issued.’
New York officials claimed there was no record of Ibarra’s arrest.
His older brother, who also entered the United States illegally, has ties to Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.
Republicans, including President-elect Donald Trump, blamed Riley’s death on President Joe Biden and his border policies.
His older brother, who also entered the United States illegally, has ties to Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.
Ibarra required a translator during court proceedings. Earlier this week, he requested a judge-only trial, which was approved.
He was indicted on 10 counts, including charges of murder, kidnapping and aggravated assault with intent to rape.
Ibarra’s legal team had sought to have certain evidence suppressed, but the request was denied.