
Boards murder trial moved to January
ANDERSON — The trial of Carl Roy Webb Boards II, charged in the shooting death of Elwood police officer Noah Shahnavaz, has been continued.
Madison Circuit Court Division 3 Judge Andrew Hopper granted a motion for a continuance in the trial, which was not objected to by the Madison County prosecutor's office.
Boards is charged with the July 2022 shooting death of Shahnavaz.
He was scheduled to go on trial in September on charges of murder, two counts of resisting law enforcement, unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, firearm enhancement, habitual offender, life without parole and the death penalty.
Judge Hopper set a new trial date of Jan. 26, 2026, with jury selection to begin on Jan. 12, 2026.
The jury will be selected from Delaware County; Hopper indicated a jury questionnaire would be sent in November of this year.
Deputy Prosecutor Jesse Miller said the process of selecting a jury would begin around Thanksgiving and continue through the Christmas holiday.
Hopper said there were several weeks between the two holidays.
Hopper set a hearing for April 15 concerning defense attorneys' request for an intellectual disability hearing for Boards.
The state wants the process of having an insanity evaluation of Boards to start at the same time.
Defense attorney Joe Duepner said the insanity evaluation should take place after an intellectual disability evaluation is completed.
'That could result in a complete shift in our strategy,' he said.
Duepner said different people should perform the separate evaluations of Boards, who has already filed an insanity defense in the case.
Duepner recommended the intellectual disability evaluation be done by July, and the insanity evaluation by October.
Andrew Hanna, chief deputy prosecutor, said that timeline would jeopardize the January trial date.
Judge Hopper agreed that could impact the trial date.
'We have already moved the trial date from September to January,' Hanna said. 'There is no reason the insanity evaluations can't start now.'
Boards was found competent to stand trial by three doctors in April 2024.

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