About: Judy Williams   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/8o1p8DBc7tTqR4sOpNWJXA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Judy Williams is an inmate at Maryland Women's Prison. She was imprisoned for murder, possibly for life. In the early years of her sentence, Judy blamed her crime on her "crappy childhood", but while volunteering for a prison program, helping to train seeing-eye dogs, she suddenly felt remorse for the terrible thing she had done: killing an innocent person who had done nothing to her. This self-realization was, as she confessed to Timothy McGee, a "mixed blessing." It made her more serene about her daily life, but also made her depressed and fatalistic. As she said to McGee, she looked forward to her own death, so she could find the soul of her victim and say how sorry she was.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Judy Williams
rdfs:comment
  • Judy Williams is an inmate at Maryland Women's Prison. She was imprisoned for murder, possibly for life. In the early years of her sentence, Judy blamed her crime on her "crappy childhood", but while volunteering for a prison program, helping to train seeing-eye dogs, she suddenly felt remorse for the terrible thing she had done: killing an innocent person who had done nothing to her. This self-realization was, as she confessed to Timothy McGee, a "mixed blessing." It made her more serene about her daily life, but also made her depressed and fatalistic. As she said to McGee, she looked forward to her own death, so she could find the soul of her victim and say how sorry she was.
dcterms:subject
first-ncis
last-ncis
dbkwik:ncis/proper...iPageUsesTemplate
Status
  • Arrested.
Name
  • Judy Williams
Caption
  • Judy Williams in the Season 6 episode, "Caged".
La
  • show
Gender
  • Female
Portrayed
abstract
  • Judy Williams is an inmate at Maryland Women's Prison. She was imprisoned for murder, possibly for life. In the early years of her sentence, Judy blamed her crime on her "crappy childhood", but while volunteering for a prison program, helping to train seeing-eye dogs, she suddenly felt remorse for the terrible thing she had done: killing an innocent person who had done nothing to her. This self-realization was, as she confessed to Timothy McGee, a "mixed blessing." It made her more serene about her daily life, but also made her depressed and fatalistic. As she said to McGee, she looked forward to her own death, so she could find the soul of her victim and say how sorry she was. She assisted McGee in investigating the murder of a prison guard, Hayden Trimble, while he was being held hostage there.
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