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Texas Kidnap Suspect Fights Return

The man charged in the killing of a Texas college student who was abducted last week outside the store where she worked refused on Tuesday to agree to extradition back to Texas. The abduction was

by the store's surveillance system.

Johnny Lee Williams, a former marine with a history of drug charges, appeared in court on a fugitive warrant seeking his return to Tyler, Texas, to face kidnapping and first-degree homicide charges in the death of Megan Leann Holden. He was arrested Friday at a Willcox hospital where he sought treatment after being shot during an attempted robbery.

"He is not going to sign a waiver today," public defender Teri Goral said during a hearing before Superior Court Judge Jim L. Conlogue.

Conlogue set another hearing for Feb. 20. Meanwhile, Texas officials are working on getting a governor's warrant issued to bring Williams back there involuntarily, Cochise County Attorney Ed Rheinheimer said. The process was expected to take about two weeks.

Holden, 19, was kidnapped late Wednesday in the parking lot of the Wal-Mart store in Tyler, Texas, where she had worked the night shift. Videotape from a surveillance camera showed a man forcing her into her pickup.

Her body was found Friday in a ditch near Stanton, Texas, some 380 miles west of Tyler, CBS News Correspondent Bob MacNamara reported. She had been shot. Meanwhile, Williams was taken into custody several hundred miles farther west in Arizona.

A makeshift memorial was set up at the Wal-Mart on Friday. More than a dozen flower bouquets, some with notes including "Megan we will miss you," were placed on a bench by passing shoppers.

"While I was here, I just wanted to do that," said a tearful Jill Kitchens, who placed flowers, a red teddy bear and a red candle as she left with a cart of groceries.

Williams, 24, son of a preacher, did not speak during the hearing.

Goral said she was outraged that the judge had departed from normal procedure by bringing Williams into court even though he had not agreed to sign an extradition waiver. She said Williams' rights had been violated. But she said he might choose to waive extradition later.

Goral and Deputy County Attorney Terry Bannon both declined to comment outside court.

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