UPDATE 10/9/12 @ 2:05 p.m.
BOONE COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- The case against a woman accused of killing an elderly man is moving forward.
Maura Perry appeared in court Tuesday for her preliminary hearing.
Perry is charged with first degree murder in the death of 71 year old Jimmy Cooper at his home in Boone County. Investigators say she shot and killed him to help sustain her drug addiction.
During Tuesday's hearing, a magistrate found probable cause to send the case to a grand jury.
“A lot of people were surprised by that,” King said. “She was really nice to everybody that came in here, you know. It was just really shocking.”
But that's exactly what the Boone County Sheriff says 20-year-old Maura Perry did. Sometime around Sept. 16, she allegedly walked into Jimmy Cooper's trailer in Peytona, pointed a revolver at the back of his head, and pulled the trigger.
King said that was a far cry from the young woman she knew at the Burger King in Hamlin.
“Just a normal person,” King said. “She knew what she was doing. She was better than some of the people around here.”
Working so close to a murder suspect is something that gives Josh chills.
“It's kinda crazy that I used to work with her,” King said. “That she has that potential to kill somebody. It definitely is.”
The Boone County Sheriff told us last week this was no random crime. He believed the shooter knew Cooper and was after his prescription drugs -- something that's hard to swallow.
“You certainly have a soft spot for those types of individuals,” Sheriff Rodney Miller said. “We want to do the best job we can out of respect for him his family.”
King says he knew Maura had problems in her past but nothing he thought would lead to this.
“Just random crazy relationships and drugs,” King said. “But that's about all I know.”
Perry is being held at the Southwestern Regional Jail. We tried to contact her for an interview, but she denied that request.
Maura Shea Perry, 20, of Hamlin, W.Va., is charged with first-degree murder, which carries a penalty of life in prison.
The body of 71-year-old Jimmie Cooper was first discovered when co-workers were concerned because they had not seen the victim for several days and failed to report to his job.
When checking on Cooper, they found the door to his residence partially open and notified the Sheriff's Office. Deputies checked the home and discovered the victim's body.
Investigators believe that Cooper was killed by a single gunshot wound to the head as he lay in his bed at home.
Investigators believe Perry had an ongoing relationship with the victim and stole property after the murder, which she pawned to support her drug usage, according to information from the news release.
Deputies recovered Cooper's car at a park and ride at Scott Depot, in Putnam County on Thursday, where it had been abandoned. Several items have been recovered from pawn shops in the Kanawha Valley area that belonged to the victim.
Perry has been transported to the Southwestern Regional Jail awaiting arraignment before a Boone County magistrate.
In the meantime: neighbors like Casey Halsted are still trying to accept a crime they never expected.
“It's mind boggling a little bit,” Halsted said.
Cooper’s remains were found late Wednesday night inside his home just off Route 3. Casey says even though Cooper was elderly, he was a fighter.
“He's the type of man wouldn't stand back for nobody,” Halsted said. “He'd stand his ground.”
The Boone County Sheriff says sometime in the last week, someone forced their way inside Coopers home and killed him. He thinks Cooper was targeted.
“We don't think it's something that's random,” Sheriff Miller said. “We don't think it's something that people are going to go from home to home and continue the violence.”
Even for his deputies, cases like this are hard to swallow.
“You've got a 71 year old fellow that was living by himself just trying to live out his life as comfortable as possible,” Sheriff Miller said.
The Sheriff says Cooper was a veteran, and worked as a part time security guard up until he was killed. Neighbors tell WSAZ.com he had also been a minister, and he loved people.
“He was a good going person,” Halsted said. “He’d talk to anybody. Or help them.”
Now, Halsted and his family are left trying to make sense of a senseless crime and hoping the killer is brought to justice.
Sheriff Miller says Cooper’s car was found Thursday in Putnam County. His office is investigating how exactly it wound up there.
The Boone County Sheriff's Department tells WSAZ.com Jimmie Cooper, 71, was found late Wednesday night.
Cooper had not been heard from or seen since last Thursday. His car was missing, but it has been recovered in Putnam County.
Sheriff Miller tells WSAZ.com they are not sure how Cooper died but they did find signs of forced entry at his home.
Miller says they are treating the case as a homicide.
Keep clicking on WSAZ.com for the latest information.
Boone County Sheriff Rodney Miller says the body of a 71-year-old man was found late Wednesday night.
The man had not been heard from or seen since last Thursday. His car was missing, but it has been recovered in Putnam County.
Sheriff Miller tells WSAZ.com they are not sure how the man died but they did find signs of forced entry.
Miller says they are treating the scene as a homicide.
The man's name has not been released because deputies are trying to get in touch with his family.
Miller says investigators are currently conducting interviews in the case.
The man's body has been sent to the state medical examiner's office in Charleston for an autopsy.
Keep clicking on WSAZ.com for the latest information.
Police at the scene say they were called to the trailer in Peytona, just off Route 3 about 11:30 p.m. to investigate.
Boone County Sheriff's Deputies, West Virginia State Police and a crime scene unit are at the trailer right now.
No other information about the situation is being released.
We have a crew on the scene. Keep clicking on WSAZ.com for the latest information.
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