WLOS News 13 published July 9, 2026: Seven people in North Carolina face charges after the remains of a missing woman were found buried on a Rutherfordton property. #news #northcarolina
The Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office said Christina Sue Hamilton, Stevon Kristoff Wilkerson, Ronald David Gibson, Tiquah Dominique Carter, Alexis Nicole Morgan and Shadrick Deon Hines are all charged with accessory after the fact in the death of 30-year-old Jordan Wishon. Morgan, Gibson, Hines and Wilkerson were also charged with concealing a death.
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WLOS News 13, NC local
written by Marc Liverman
Wednesday July 8, 2026
RUTHERFORDTON, N.C. — A Rutherford County woman who lives on the same street where the buried remains of a 30-year-old woman were found is reacting to an update in the homicide investigation.
"I feel bad for her family," said Sharon Parker, who lives just down the street on Pebblestone Lane in Rutherfordton.
On June 27, investigators searched a home on Pebbleston Lane, where human remains were discovered buried on the property. The remains were identified as those of 30-year-old Jordan Wishon, authorities confirmed.
The next day, on June 28, a warrant charging 25-year-old Jaydakis Kashaune Hamilton with first-degree murder was issued, according to the Rutherford County Sheriff's Office.
On Wednesday, July 8, authorities announced that six more people face charges in connection with the homicide investigation.
The six others are facing accessory after the fact charges. That includes Christina Hamilton, who, public records suggest, is the mother of Jaydakis Hamilton.
Christina Sue Hamilton, Stevon Kristoff Wilkerson, Ronald David Gibson, Tiquah Dominique Carter, Alexis Nicole Morgan and Shadrick Deon Hines are all charged with accessory after the fact in the death of Jordan Wishon. Additionally, Morgan, Gibson, Hines and Wilkerson are also charged with concealing a death.
Parker added that she's been living on the quiet street for 26 years. She said that in the past month, the street has been busier, with more cars coming and going more frequently.
"There had just been a lot of traffic. That's all we noticed," she said. "All day long and in the night."
Parker said she used to feel so safe on her street that she didn't even lock her doors. But after this, that all changed.
"Now we lock everything down. We lock our doors up, and you have to lock everything up now. It is a scary thing to deal with," she said.





























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