The arrest affidavit for her husband, Jose Villa Denova, reveals police became skeptical of him when his story did not add up and the sheer amount of blood found around his family’s home.
According to the Affidavit, Yolanda Jaimes' daughter, Yuliza Villa Jaimes, first heard of her mother's disappearance at noon on June 24 via a phone call from her father, Jose Villa Denova.
Villa Denova told Yuliza that Yolanda's job contacted him 45 minutes earlier to say she did not show up for her 8 a.m. shift. He continued telling his daughter he had not found Yolanda or her truck at their home on Craybrough Circle, so he would be going to his wife's dealership where they got her truck to figure out if they could access the GPS tracker in her truck.
At 3:22 p.m., Villa Denova calls Yuliza again to say her mom's truck was at a nearby park seven miles away from their home, according to the dealership. The affidavit later reveals Villa Denova never went to the dealership and Yolanda’s truck does not even have a GPS tracker in it.
Villa Denova does not head out to the park, but Yuliza does and finds her mom’s car. She unlocks it with a spare key and finds her mom’s crews in the center console. Yuliza also sees her mom's pillow that she uses to drive has been moved to the passenger side with her purse underneath.
Officers write in the affidavit that the moved pillow reveals a possibility that, "someone other than Yolanda drove the truck to [the] park and left it there."
The arrest affidavit for her husband, Jose Villa Denova, reveals police became skeptical of him when his story did not add up and the sheer amount of blood found around his family’s home.
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