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An Iowa woman pleads not guilty in the 2011 killing of real estate agent

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An Iowa woman pleads not guilty in the 2011 killing of real estate agent
News

News

An Iowa woman pleads not guilty in the 2011 killing of real estate agent

2026-04-11 05:37 Last Updated At:05:51

ADEL, Iowa (AP) — A woman charged in the killing of a young real estate agent in Iowa pleaded not guilty Friday, almost 15 years to the day that the death rattled the industry and led to heightened safety practices for agents nationwide.

Iowa Realty agent Ashley Okland, 27, was found dead at a model townhome in West Des Moines, where she was hosting an open house April 8, 2011. Her family and friends filled the courtroom for a Friday hearing for Kristin Ramsey, 53, who was arrested last month after an indictment charged her with first-degree murder.

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Alfredo Parrish, attorney for Kristin Ramsey, speaks during a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Alfredo Parrish, attorney for Kristin Ramsey, speaks during a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Ashley Okland's siblings, Josh Okland and Brittany Bruce, attend a hearing for Kristin Ramsey at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Ashley Okland's siblings, Josh Okland and Brittany Bruce, attend a hearing for Kristin Ramsey at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, sits in a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, sits in a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, enters a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, enters a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

“That Friday afternoon when Ashley was taken from us seems so long ago,” Brittany Bruce, Okland’s sister told reporters in March. “We had lost our hope in finding answers and having any justice for Ashley.”

Prosecutors have said little about Ramsey following her March 17 indictment by a grand jury and arrest, withholding information on what they consider to be a potential motive or whether there is new evidence in the case.

Court documents filed this week ahead of the arraignment and bond review hearing Friday give limited insight into the grand jury proceedings.

Prosecutors said a neighbor who called 911 reportedly saw Ramsey, who worked with Okland, outside the front door of the model home and pacing by her car while talking on her cellphone before she drove off. State Assistant Attorney General Scott Brown said during the hearing Friday that Ramsey returned 15 minutes later.

Ramsey’s attorneys said there are gaps in the case prosecutors presented to the grand jury, including by misrepresenting what the witness reported in the 911 call, and attorney Alfredo Parrish said the grand jury even pushed back.

“You don’t wait 15 years and then say: ‘OK, let’s make a go of it,’" Parrish said.

Grand jury proceedings, a rare occurrence for criminal cases in Iowa, are generally kept confidential. The prosecution released the details in resisting a motion from Ramsey’s attorneys to lower her bail amount, currently set at $2 million.

Okland’s death rippled throughout Des Moines’ small, tight-knit real estate community, said her coworker Scott Steelman, president of the Des Moines Area Association of Realtors and an agent at Iowa Realty. He described the killing as “so out of character for our business, our industry, our profession.”

After Okland’s death, the realtors' association pushed to create safety standards and guidance.

“Nationwide, it’s caused the real estate community to take greater caution when interacting with the public," Steelman said. “We will not show any property to someone who we don’t know, aren’t familiar or at least have not vetted."

That safety pledge crafted in Iowa is promoted by the National Association of Realtors and is being used by hundreds of state and local associations across the U.S.

Since Ramsey also is a member of the real estate community, Steelman said her arrest also has spurred confusion and more questions than answers.

At the time, Ramsey had worked for Rottlund Homes of Iowa, which used independent real estate agents for sales. Rottlund Homes owned the model home where Okland was killed.

Ramsey appeared in court Friday wearing a pantsuit, with one arm and both feet shackled. She wiped tears from her eyes at times as witnesses described her character as part of the defense’s effort to reduce her bail amount. Her husband and son, parents and grandfather sat in the first row behind her.

Ramsey was initially appointed a public defender but is now represented by prominent defense attorneys, who said she has strong family ties and has lived in small, rural town of Woodward, Iowa, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) northwest of Des Moines, since she was a child.

Prosecutors said a witness was next door in a townhome that shared a wall with the model home when they heard two loud noises “described as thuds that were 3-4 seconds apart,” according to the filing. Prosecutors said the witness looked out after hearing the sounds and saw Ramsey by the front door. The witness then saw her pacing by her car on her cellphone before driving off, returning later.

“Concerned that something was wrong, the witness entered the model home and discovered Ms. Okland unresponsive on the ground,” the filing reads. The witness called 911, prosecutors said.

In their response, Ramsey’s attorneys said prosecutors are offering “cherry-picked” evidence, arguing that they did not present the grand jury with a weapon, ballistics evidence or DNA evidence.

“So while the State is right the grand jury’s job was to consider the evidence presented to it, it fails to disclose that the State chose not to present all the evidence it has collected in the last 15 years,” Ramsey’s attorneys wrote. “The grand jurors here were shown only a few pieces of the puzzle over two days—not the whole picture.”

Trial is set to begin next January.

Alfredo Parrish, attorney for Kristin Ramsey, speaks during a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Alfredo Parrish, attorney for Kristin Ramsey, speaks during a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Ashley Okland's siblings, Josh Okland and Brittany Bruce, attend a hearing for Kristin Ramsey at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Ashley Okland's siblings, Josh Okland and Brittany Bruce, attend a hearing for Kristin Ramsey at the Dallas County courthouse in Adel, Iowa, on Friday, April 10, 2026. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, sits in a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, sits in a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, enters a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

Kristin Ramsey, charged in the killing of a young real estate agent, enters a hearing at the Dallas County courthouse, Friday, April 10, 2026 in Adel, Iowa. (Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register via AP, Pool)

HOUSTON (AP) — Their dramatic grand finale fast approaching, Artemis II’s astronauts aimed for a splashdown in the Pacific on Friday to close out humanity’s first voyage to the moon in more than a half-century.

The tension in Mission Control mounted as the miles melted away between the four returning astronauts and Earth.

All eyes were on the capsule’s life-protecting heat shield that has to withstand thousands of degrees during reentry. On the spacecraft's only other test flight — in 2022, with no one on board — the shield’s charred exterior came back looking as pockmarked as the moon.

Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canada’s Jeremy Hansen were on track to hit the atmosphere traveling Mach 33 — or 33 times the speed of sound — a blistering blur not seen since NASA’s Apollo moonshots of the 1960s and 1970s.

They didn’t plan on taking manual control except in an emergency. Their Orion capsule, dubbed Integrity, is completely self-flying.

Like so many others, lead flight director Jeff Radigan anticipated feeling some of that “irrational fear that is human nature,” especially during the six minutes of communication blackout preceding the opening of the parachutes. The recovery ship USS John P. Murtha awaited the crew's arrival off the coast of San Diego, along with a squadron of military planes and helicopters.

The last time NASA and the Defense Department teamed up for a lunar crew's reentry was Apollo 17 in 1972. Artemis II was projected to come screaming back at 36,170 feet (11,025 meters) per second — or 24,661 mph (39,668 kph) — just shy of the record before slowing to a 19 mph (30 kph) splashdown.

Launched from Florida on April 1, the astronauts racked up one win after another as they deftly navigated NASA’s long-awaited lunar comeback, the first major step in establishing a sustainable moon base.

Artemis II didn't land on the moon or even orbit it. But it broke Apollo 13's distance record and marked the farthest that humans have ever journeyed from Earth when the crew reached 252,756 miles (406,771 kilometers). Then in the mission's most heart-tugging scene, the teary astronauts asked permission to name a pair of craters after their moonship and Wiseman's late wife, Carroll.

During Monday's record-breaking flyby, they documented scenes of the moon's far side never seen before by the human eye along with a total solar eclipse. The eclipse, in particular, “just blew all of us away,” Glover said.

Their sense of wonder and love awed everyone, as did their breathtaking pictures of the moon and Earth. The Artemis II crew channeled Apollo 8's first lunar explorers with Earthset, showing our Blue Marble setting behind the gray moon. It was reminiscent of Apollo 8’s famous Earthrise shot from 1968.

“It just makes you want to continue to go back,” Radigan said on the eve of splashdown. “It's the first of many trips and we just need to continue on because there’s so much” more to learn about the moon.

Their moonshot drew global attention as well as star power, earning props from President Donald Trump; Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney; Britain's King Charles III; Ryan Gosling, star of the latest space flick “Project Hail Mary”; Scarlett Johansson of the Marvel Cinematic Universe; and even Captain Kirk himself, William Shatner of TV’s original “Star Trek.”

Despite its rich scientific yield, the nearly 10-day flight was not without technical issues. Both the capsule’s drinking water and propellant systems were hit with valve problems. In perhaps the most high-profile predicament, the toilet kept malfunctioning, but the astronauts shrugged it all off.

“We can’t explore deeper unless we are doing a few things that are inconvenient,” Koch said, “unless we’re making a few sacrifices, unless we’re taking a few risks, and those things are all worth it.”

Added Hansen: “You do a lot of testing on the ground, but your final test is when you get this hardware to space and it’s a doozy.”

Under the revamped Artemis program, next year’s Artemis III will see astronauts practice docking their capsule with a lunar lander or two in orbit around Earth. Artemis IV will attempt to land a crew of two near the moon’s south pole in 2028.

The Artemis II astronauts' allegiance was to those future crews, Wiseman said.

“But we really hoped in our soul is that we could for just for a moment have the world pause and remember that this is a beautiful planet and a very special place in our universe, and we should all cherish what we have been gifted,” he said.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew, counterclockwise from top left, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, Commander Reid Wiseman, and Pilot Victor Glover pose with eclipse viewers during a lunar flyby, Monday, April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew, counterclockwise from top left, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, Commander Reid Wiseman, and Pilot Victor Glover pose with eclipse viewers during a lunar flyby, Monday, April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew photographed the Moons curved limb during their journey around the far side of the Moon on April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew photographed the Moons curved limb during their journey around the far side of the Moon on April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew photographed a bright portion of the Moon on April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew photographed a bright portion of the Moon on April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew captured this view as the Earth sets behind the Moon during a lunar flyby, Monday, April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, the Artemis II crew captured this view as the Earth sets behind the Moon during a lunar flyby, Monday, April 6, 2026. (NASA via AP)

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