ATHENS, Ga. — A judge considering whether to grant a new trial to the Venezuelan man convicted of killing Georgia nursing student Laken Riley heard testimony Friday from a DNA expert retained by his attorneys to analyze evidence in his murder case.
Jose Ibarra's trial attorneys had asked the judge to delay a hearing set a few weeks before his November trial after the expert told them she would need six weeks to review the data and complete a report.
The move would have pushed back the trial. Clarke County Superior Court Judge H. Patrick Haggard ultimately proceeded with the trial as scheduled.
The expert, Ruth Ballard, said during Friday's hearing that she could not rule out the possibility that Ibarra's DNA was transferred onto a jacket and other evidence she reviewed indirectly.
Under questioning by a prosecutor, Ballard acknowledged she had not finished a complete review of the case. She also acknowledged writing that a ''reasonable explanation'' for the crime lab findings in the case was that Ibarra's DNA got onto the evidence when he killed Riley.
Ibarra, dressed in a white jumpsuit, sat at a table with his attorneys.
Haggard did not rule immediately on Ibarra's request to vacate his guilty verdict and life sentence and grant him a new trial. He gave attorneys another month to file legal arguments.
Haggard found Ibarra guilty of murder and other charges in November after Ibarra waived his right to a jury trial. He sentenced Ibarra to life in prison without the possibility of parole.