published Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Parker will get life in prison


by Chloé Morrison
  • photo
    Staff Photo by Tim Barber
    Defense attorneys David Dunn, left, and Doug Woodruff go to back of the Walker County Jail on Thursday afternoon as hoards of media swarm in front of the Walker County Courthouse in LaFayette, Ga.

LaFAYETTE, Ga. —  Sam Parker showed no emotion this afternoon when he was sentenced to life in prison for murdering his wife, Theresa Parker, in 2007.

The courtroom was packed shortly after 4:30 p.m. Bailiffs stood at the doors and two stood behind Mr. Parker as the verdict was read.

Walker County Superior Court Judge Jon “Bo” Wood warned audience to control its emotions as the verdict was read: Guilty of malice murder. Guilty making false statements. Guilty of violating his oath as a public officer.

Theresa Parker’s family wept softly in their seats, but otherwise the courtroom remained quiet.

The jury was escorted from the courtroom under guard and Judge Wood offered Mr. Parker a chance to comment before he passed sentence.

Mr. Parker said he did not want to say anything.

Judge Wood read the sentence: Life in prison for murder, plus five-year concurrent terms in the other cases.

The Mr. Parker was taken out of the room by a deputy.

Article: Parker niece: 'She was the glue in the family'

Article: Theresa Parker laid to rest

Article: Crowds gather to grieve with Parker family

Article: Funeral services set for slain Walker County dispatcher Theresa Parker

Article: GBI confirms Parker was a homicide victim

Article: Examination of Parker bones complete

Article: Examination of Parker’s remains complete

Article: Keychain led to ID of Parker

Article: Theresa Parker's remains finally found

Video: Theresa Parker's body found

Article: Family relieved that Theresa Parker's remains have been found, sheriff says

Article: Find brings back ‘hurt’

Slideshow: Theresa Parker's remains finally found

Article:Parker trial turns media spotlight on Walker County

Article: Jury deliberations continue in Parker slaying trial

Article: Testimony gives insight into culture of police

Article: Parker chooses not to testify

Article: State rests its case against former officer Sam Parker

Article: Witnesses testify to violence, threats by Sam Parker

Article: Officers express doubts on Parker

Article: Friend says Parker acted normal on trip

Article: Cadaver dogs out of Parker trial

Article: Friend asked deputies to check on Mrs. Parker

Article: Judge keeps Parker in jail

Article: Chattanooga: Judge denies separation of charges for Parker

PDF: Indictment against Sam Parker and motions from defense lawyers and prosecutors

Article: Georgia: Sam Parker talks about life in jail

Article: Investigators use robotic camera to search well, Blue Hole for clues or body of Theresa Parker

Judge denies bond for Sam Parker

Parker bond pending judge’s decision

Parker facing more charges

Husband arrested in missing dispatcher case

Walker County 911 dispatcher missing since March 21

International investigator, K-9 dog join Parker search

Dispatcher's family plans vigil to keep search alive

Officer to face extradition on charges in missing dispatcher case

LaFayette Police officer fired for having explosives

Sheriff starts tip line for Parker case

Dispatcher's family tries to move on as questions persist

Message boards new turf in Parker case

Missing dispatcher fundraiser planned

New prosecutor accepts missing woman case

Missing woman's husband fired

Dispatcher's friend keeps busy with vigils, fundraisers

Family of missing woman announces launch of Web site

Theresa Parker family creates Web site

Illinois case mirrors Parker's

Mrs. Parker's 911 job filled

LaFayette officer suspended without pay

Husband of missing dispatcher Theresa Parker says he's been singled out unfairly

Search continues for dispatcher

LaFayette officer charged with making false statements in Parker investigation

When a loved one is missing

Pond draining comes up empty

Authorities draining pond in dispatcher search

Benefit for missing woman seeks smiles

Lawyer to Parker: Stop talking

Public Defender David Dunn, Mr. Parker’s lawyer, left immediately without commenting.

Mrs. Parker’s family also left without speaking to media.

The verdict came at the end of the third day of deliberation in the trial.

Mrs. Parker was last seen in March, 2007. No body was ever found and Mr. Parker pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors built their case around circumstantial evidence, developing a timeline showing how Mr. Parker could have committed the crime and disposed of the body.

The defense case centered around the lack of any direct evidence that Mrs. Parker had been harmed or that Mr. Parker had anything to do with her disappearance.

See Friday’s Times Free Press for complete coverage.

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