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Wilberger family is considering plea deal
Friday, July 04, 2008 | No comments posted.
CORVALLIS (AP) — The parents of Brooke Wilberger have signaled they would support a plea deal should the man accused of abducting and murdering their daughter four years ago reveal the whereabouts of her remains.
That came in a statement Benton County District Attorney John Haroldson released Wednesday on the family’s behalf.
The suspect, Joel Courtney, is being held without bail in Benton County.
A trial is not expected to begin before 2010.
At age 19, Brooke Wilberger disappeared on May 24, 2004 from a Corvallis apartment building parking lot. She is presumed to be dead.
The prosecutor has vowed to seek the death penalty.
“We remain committed to the recovery of Brooke’s remains, and fully support the Benton County District Attorney’s efforts to do so within a reasonable period of time,” read the statement from Greg and Cammy Wilberger.
“In a criminal case, there can be a fully contested trial, and there can be a negotiated resolution,” the statement said. “We completely support the Benton County District Attorney’s Office in their approach to the case, whether through trial or a timely negotiated resolution.”
Haroldson said he had not asked for the statement nor advised the family about it.
He released it to two Oregon newspapers, the Gazette-Times in Corvallis and the Register-Guard in Eugene, near the Wilbergers’ home in Veneta.
He said it was a response to requests from reporters for comment after the 42-year-old Courtney was extradited from New Mexico in April.
That followed his conviction on charges of kidnapping and raping a Russian foreign exchange student.
Brooke Wilberger was in Corvallis helping at the apartment complex her sister managed. She was on summer break after completing her freshman year at Brigham Young University.
That came in a statement Benton County District Attorney John Haroldson released Wednesday on the family’s behalf.
The suspect, Joel Courtney, is being held without bail in Benton County.
A trial is not expected to begin before 2010.
At age 19, Brooke Wilberger disappeared on May 24, 2004 from a Corvallis apartment building parking lot. She is presumed to be dead.
The prosecutor has vowed to seek the death penalty.
“We remain committed to the recovery of Brooke’s remains, and fully support the Benton County District Attorney’s efforts to do so within a reasonable period of time,” read the statement from Greg and Cammy Wilberger.
“In a criminal case, there can be a fully contested trial, and there can be a negotiated resolution,” the statement said. “We completely support the Benton County District Attorney’s Office in their approach to the case, whether through trial or a timely negotiated resolution.”
Haroldson said he had not asked for the statement nor advised the family about it.
He released it to two Oregon newspapers, the Gazette-Times in Corvallis and the Register-Guard in Eugene, near the Wilbergers’ home in Veneta.
He said it was a response to requests from reporters for comment after the 42-year-old Courtney was extradited from New Mexico in April.
That followed his conviction on charges of kidnapping and raping a Russian foreign exchange student.
Brooke Wilberger was in Corvallis helping at the apartment complex her sister managed. She was on summer break after completing her freshman year at Brigham Young University.






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