For the second time in recent years, Judith Ann Neelley will appear before the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles, but even if she is granted parole in Alabama, Chattooga County Sheriff Mark Schrader says she is facing a life sentence in Georgia that was handed down in Chattooga County Superior Court.

The family of Neelley’s thirteen-year-old victim, Lisa Millican, is asking the public to speak out against parole in Alabama.  “We are, of course, urging protest letters once again,” said Cassie Millican, Lisa’s sister-in-law. “With each parole, typically there will be less exposure. The less exposure there is, the less protesting there’ll be.”

The Millican family asks the community to send protest letters to Alabama Bureau of Pardons & Paroles, Attn: Victim Services, 100 Capital Commerce Blvd., Suite 310, Montgomery, AL 36117. Include Judith Neelley’s name and AIS number (00202618).

But Chattooga County Sheriff Mark Schrader has written a letter to the Alabama Bureau of Pardons & Paroles to tell them if for some reason they grant Neelley parole, he or one of his deputies will be waiting to transport her back to Georgia to face the life sentence she was handed in 1983 in Chattooga County Superior Court.

You can see Sheriff Schrader’s letter below: