Airman gets life for murder: ‘I just enjoy killing. Simple as that’

OFFUTT AIR FORCE BASE, Neb. — An airman from Valdosta, Georgia was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole Wednesday for slaying a woman on an Air Force base in Nebraska.

Airman 1st Class Timothy M. Wilsey was also given a dishonorable discharge, reduced in rank to airman E-1 — the Air Force’s lowest possible rank — forfeited all pay and allowances and was given an official reprimand, according to a statement from Offutt Air Force Base, Neb., where the crime took place.

Wilsey pleaded guilty April 5 to premeditated murder and desertion, according to the Air Force. He admitted killing Airman 1st Class Rhianda N. Dillard.

Dillard, 20, was found dead in her dormitory room at Offutt, Aug. 1, 2016, said Drew Nystrom with Offutt’s public affairs office. She was a cyber systems operation specialist assigned to the 55th Strategic Communications Squadron at Offutt who arrived at the base March 14, he said. Wilsey was a member of the 55th Intelligence Support Squadron at Offutt, Nystrom said.

Wilsey was not assigned to Moody Air Force Base.

Wilsey was apprehended Aug. 11 in a hotel in Emporia, Va., by agents of the Air Force’s Office of Special Investigations, assisted by the Greensville, Va., County Sheriff’s Office, according to a press release from the Air Force’s Office of Special Investigations. Air Force operatives had been sent to Valdosta searching for him.

At a preliminary hearing, prosecutors said they had a handwritten journal describing Dillard’s death and the handwriting matched Wilsey’s. An OSI agent testified the journal was found among Wilsey’s possessions when he was picked up in Virginia.

Journal entries reportedly described the incident in detail, suggesting the pair were sitting on her dorm room bed watching television on a laptop when he counted down three times, then placed Dillard in a headlock, sat on her and choked her to death before leaving with some Oreos, an observer at the hearing said.

Entries from the journal were also used during Wilsey’s sentencing hearing, including an entry stating, “I just enjoy killing. Simple as that.”

For their encounter, Wilsey chose to wear a T-shirt emblazoned with a picture of the Joker, the arch-enemy of Batman.

 

“I thought it would be funny to wear a shirt of a sociopathic serial killer while committing a murder,” he wrote in the journal.

If Wilsey ever comes up for parole, Dillard’s mother, Elizabeth, said she would work to ensure he wasn’t released.

“As long as I’m alive, he won’t be getting out. I’m going to testify every time,” she said.

Steve Liewer of the Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald contributed to this report. See Liewer’s report on their website

Terry Richards is senior reporter at The Valdosta Daily Times.

 
 
 

More Stories

Alabama’s road conditions ranked second best in the United States

More Stories

Gov. Ivey commutes death sentence for 1991 Decatur murder prisoner

More Stories

42nd Alabama State Games registration opens

More Stories

Alabama Republican Party re-elects John Wahl as Chairman

More Stories

Warning siren failure in Limestone County

News

‘Great things ahead’: Mayor Marks shares insights on city’s future in annual address

More Stories

Grammy-nominated singer Angie Stone dies in Montgomery car crash

More Stories

Limestone County outdoor warning sirens malfunctioning

News

Melson disputes patient’s version of conversation regarding purchasing medical cannabis ‘off the street’

More Stories

Homeland Security recognizes ALEA as Partner of the Year

More Stories

Athens earns 2024 Tree City USA recognition from Arbor Day Foundation

More Stories

Teacher of the Year: Anna Thompson

News

‘Justice was served’: Limestone County jury finds Morgan County man guilty of murder after 10-day trial

News

Brookyln’s brave battle: The inspiring journey of a local kids life with spinal muscular atrophy

More Stories

Teacher of the Year: Jennie Fullmer

More Stories

Teacher of the Year: Kaitlin Sparkman

More Stories

Ardmore welcomes new family medicine center

More Stories

Hit and run claims life of Athens man

More Stories

LCSO arrest Athens man for infant abuse

News

Final Curtain Call: Beloved Band Director Dan Havely passes away

News

Calhoun Community College to go virtual due to impending weather

News

Gov. Ivey announces that ArcelorMittal plans $1.2 Billion Alabama mill

More Stories

U.S. Space and Rocket Center announces passing of Maria von Braun, wife of Dr. Wernher von Braun

Lifestyles

Athens Cheer heads to Orlando to compete for national titles