ATLANTA, May 31, 2005

Runaway Bride To Pay $13K

Money To Go To City Of Duluth For Costs Incurred Searching For Her

  • This Hall County, Ga., booking photo shows Jennifer Wilbanks after one of three separate shoplifting incidents that occured when she was 24 or younger. Wilbanks served two weekends in jail in 1998.

    This Hall County, Ga., booking photo shows Jennifer Wilbanks after one of three separate shoplifting incidents that occured when she was 24 or younger. Wilbanks served two weekends in jail in 1998.  (AP)

  • Photo Essay Runaway Bride

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

(AP)  Runaway bride Jennifer Wilbanks has agreed to pay $13,250 to the city of Duluth, Georgia, to help pay for the costs the city incurred searching for her, the mayor said Tuesday.

The city attorney notified Mayor Shirley Lasseter that a written agreement for compensation had been reached. The city was expected to receive a check from Wilbanks on Tuesday, Lasseter said.

In accepting the agreement, the city will have to write off about $30,000 in other costs searching for the bride-to-be, who disappeared April 26, four days before her planned wedding.

"We're very appreciative they were willing to give us the $13,000. We would have certainly welcomed the entire amount that covered all of our employees but we are ready to get this behind us," Lasseter said.

Wilbanks was indicted last Wednesday on charges she told police a phony story about being kidnapped and sexually assaulted. She was charged with making a false statement and making a false police report.

She could get up to six years behind bars and $11,000 in fines if convicted. She could also be ordered to reimburse authorities, though several state and county agencies have said they will not ask Wilbanks to reimburse them for search costs.

Wilbanks, a nurse, disappeared from her Duluth home on April 26 and took a bus to Las Vegas and then Albuquerque, New Mexico, where she called authorities with a story about having been abducted. She later recanted and said she fled because of unspecified personal issues.

She returned to Georgia on April 30 and has since entered into psychiatric treatment. Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter previously said he will wait until she completes treatment before asking her to turn herself in.

A call to Wilbanks' attorney, Lydia Sartain, was not immediately returned on Tuesday.


© MMV The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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