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For many years, Kyleigh Sousa and her mother, Karen Montenegro, would decorate Christmas trees in every room of the family’s home in New Jersey.
A man accused of dragging an Arizona State University student to her death entered a not guilty plea Thursday.
Maricopa County Superior Court says the next court appearance for 20-year-old Joseluis Marquez is Feb. 10.
Bond is set at $1 million for Marquez on suspicion of first-degree murder in the death of Kyleigh Sousa.
The 21-year-old Sousa was outside a Tempe restaurant in the early morning hours of May 26 when a man approached her and grabbed her purse. Police say the man jumped into a car and took off, dragging Sousa, who was tangled up in the purse's strap.
Police say Marquez is believed to have been the driver of the rental car involved. Sousa was kept on life support until her family arrived from New Jersey.
The trial involving the man authorities say is responsible for the 2010 dragging death of Arizona State University student Kyleigh Sousa is set for May.
More than 500 tips, a speed photo enforcement ticket, and a witness have led Tempe police to arrest a transient man in the May dragging death of 21-year-old Arizona State University student Kyleigh Sousa.
This week marks the beginning of the trial for Joseluis Marquez who is charged with the May 26, 2010 robbery and murder of Arizona State University student Kyleigh Sousa in downtown Tempe. Her brazen murder took place across the street from a police station and was the first of three student murders in and around Tempe’s downtown that year.
It’s been more than two years since Kyleigh Sousa died after being dragged and run over by a car while walking with a group of friends on the Arizona State University campus, but she still is well remembered.
For the family of a slain Arizona State University student Kyleigh Sousa, the past year has been one filled with sadness and struggle as they have moved through the grieving process.
Not only has speed photo enforcement been instrumental in slowing down habitual speeders, it has been instrumental in identifying suspects of crimes and helped lead to their arrests.
Not only has speed photo enforcement been instrumental in slowing down habitual speeders, it has been instrumental in identifying suspects of crimes and helped lead to their arrests.
The jury was out just 40 minutes before it came back with guilty verdicts against Joseluis Marquez for murdering Arizona State University student Kyleigh Sousa during a 2010 robbery in the downtown Tempe area as she walked across the street from a police station.
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
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