DULUTH, Ga., May 2, 2005

DA Mulls Charges For Runaway Bride

Wilbanks Might Be Liable For Reporting Nonexistent Kidnapping

  • Play CBS Video Video Bride May Be Charged

    Georgia bride-to-be Jennifer Wilbanks, who allegedly claimed she had been abducted before admitting she just had cold feet, could now face charges. Randall Pinkston reports on the bizarre case.

  • Video Town's Reaction To Bride

    Duluth Mayor Shirley Fanning-Lasseter and District Attorney Danny Porter spoke to The Early Show about runaway bride Jennifer Wilbanks, and the possibility of charges against her.

    • Jennifer Wilbanks is escorted by police through the airport in Albuquerque on Saturday.

      Jennifer Wilbanks is escorted by police through the airport in Albuquerque on Saturday.  (AP)

    • John Mason reacts in front of his home in Duluth, Ga., early Saturday, to news that his bride-to-be, Jennifer Wilbanks had been found alive.

      John Mason reacts in front of his home in Duluth, Ga., early Saturday, to news that his bride-to-be, Jennifer Wilbanks had been found alive.  (AP)

    • Jennifer Wilbanks

      Jennifer Wilbanks  (AP)

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  • Photo Essay Runaway Bride

    A Georgia bride-to-be claimed she was abducted, then admitted she had gotten cold feet.

(CBS/AP) 
Wilbanks boarded her plane wearing a new FBI hat, blazer, polo shirt and pants and carrying a new tote bag and teddy bear, a gift from the aviation police chief. She flew first-class — thanks to tickets bought by her parents — and said she planned to name the bear "Al," for Albuquerque.

"Law enforcement is really making a major move to deal with people in crisis," Albuquerque Police Chief Ray Schulz said Sunday. "Miss Wilbanks was definitely a person in crisis."

But in Georgia, the Gwinnett County district attorney noted that vast law-enforcement resources were used to look for the missing bride for more than three days.

Meanwhile, back in Duluth, her neighbors are relieved to find she's safe and sound, but very upset with the turmoil she put the community through, reports CBS News Correspondent Randall Pinkston.

On Sunday, members of Peachtree Corners Baptist Church, where Wilbanks' fiance, John Mason is a member, said prayers and expressed concern for the couple. Wilbanks and Mason did not attend services Sunday morning.

The Rev. Bob Horner thanked church members who had helped in the search and provided support for family members.

"Number one, we are so thankful that Jennifer has been found," Horner told the congregation. "Number two, I want to publicly thank all of you who prayed and you who went to Duluth to be with the family."

Duluth's mayor, Shirley Fanning-Lasseter, said on The Early Show that many in the town now feel betrayed and a little unappreciated.

"I would like to know that the young lady is okay, and I would certainly hope that she could find in her heart to come out to everybody and just say that she is really sorry for what she did and would make retribution towards that," Lasseter said.

Lasseter says she is also looking into the possibility of suing Wilbanks to recover the cost of the search undertaken after her disappearance. Lasseter puts the cost of that effort at $100,000.

Lasseter wants to hear from Wilbanks' family to see if there should be some other "recourse."

After Wilbanks disappeared last week without her keys, wallet or diamond ring, more than 100 officers led a search that involved several hundred volunteers, including many wedding guests and members of the bridal party.

Porter said he had no jurisdiction over the woman's initial 911 call in Albuquerque, in which she told an operator she was kidnapped by a man and a woman in their 40s who were driving a blue van. Through sobs, she told the dispatcher they had a small handgun. But Porter said Wilbanks could be charged for reporting her kidnapping story over the phone to Duluth Police Chief Randy Belcher.

After being questioned by the FBI, Wilbanks confessed that she had not been abducted. They say she instead had cold feet about her wedding and left Georgia on a bus to Las Vegas. She then took a bus to Albuquerque soon before her call.

Last year, a Wisconsin college student who faked her own abduction and turned up curled in a fetal position in a marsh was given three years' probation for obstructing police and was ordered to repay police at least $9,000 for their search.


©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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