Honduran national pleads not guilty to murdering Cobb County grandmother
- A 21-year-old man from Honduras has entered a not guilty plea in connection with the March 2025 murder of 52-year-old Camillia Williams in Cobb County, Georgia.
- Williams' body was found in bushes on Pat Mell Road, triggering a multi-day police investigation that led to Rivas-Sagastume's arrest and multiple charges including capital murder and aggravated assault.
- Authorities claim that Rivas-Sagastume attacked Williams by securing her in a chokehold until she lost consciousness, then reportedly pressed his full body weight onto her neck with both knees, resulting in her death between 11 p.m. And 1 a.m. On March 12.
- Rivas-Sagastume entered the U.S. Illegally in March 2021, was apprehended and paroled at the southern border, and had an active deportation order issued on July 11, 2023, before remaining in custody without bond.
- Camillia Williams' family intends to attend the trial scheduled for June 23, 2025, and they believe that her death could have been prevented if earlier immigration enforcement actions had been taken against Rivas-Sagastume.
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8 Articles
Illegal Alien Pleads Not Guilty In Brutal Murder Of Georgia Grandmother
An illegal immigrant previously released into the United States has pleaded not guilty to the brutal murder of a 52-year-old Georgia grandmother. David Hector Rivas-Sagastume, a 21-year-old Honduran national, entered the plea on Monday in connection with the death of Camillia Williams. Cobb County Police began investigating after Williams’ body was discovered in bushes […] Illegal Alien Pleads Not Guilty In Brutal Murder Of Georgia Grandmother
Georgia Slaying Suspect Highlighted by White House in Immigration Push Pleads Not Guilty - Miamistandard News
ATLANTA — Officials in the Trump administration used a killing in a suburban Atlanta area to back their hardline immigration policy. On Monday, the man charged with murder and rape pleaded not guilty in court. Hector David Sagastume Rivas was supposed to show up in court in Cobb County on Tuesday. But in the document that he signed with his lawyer, A. Lee Fudger, he put in his plea instead of going to official arraignment. A reply sent to Fudger…
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