50-year-old Marcy Lyn Oglesby of Maquon pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to amended charges in Knox County Court that now accuse her of murder. Authorities have identified the man found in a Maquon storage unit as Richard Young, the former Maquon Chief of Police. However, no DNA test has come back conclusive because of the decomposed nature of the body. Detective Jeremy Moore with Knox County Sheriff's Department testified for the state Wednesday. Moore testified that Oglesby accompanied deputies to the storage unit after reports of a foul odor on Oct. 7, 2022. Oglesby explained the smell away as "wet clothing" or a "dead animal." She then voluntarily opened a large box in the unit at the officers' direction but then paused and asked to speak with a deputy she's personally familiar with. She told that deputy there was a body in the box but wasn't sure who. Oglesby also told him that she thought it was wrapped in enough plastic to hide the smell. Detective Moore testified that he personally looked inside the box and saw a head covered in a pillow case, a flannel shirt, and plastic wrap covering the lower half of the body. Moore says that Young and Oglesby were in a relationship for several years and also lived with another woman. That woman faces no charges but told officers that Oglesby had been poisoning Young through food and drink, with over-the-counter medications and eye drops. Oglesby had told officers that she helped Young into an RV after he had taken a fall. Shortly after she heard a snap, believing it to be his neck. Oglesby apparently didn't alert authorities to Young's death for several reasons including she wanted to fulfill his final wish to be buried on a Native American mound. Judge James Standard found enough basis for the case to continue. Oglesby promptly entered a not guilty plea and demanded a speedy jury trial. There will be a status conference Thursday at 10 a.m. to decide whether both sides are ready to proceed to trial on the amended charges or whether more time is needed. No cameras allowed Judge Standard ruled before the hearing began that only audio recordings would be allowed by the media in covering the case. Defense attorneys argued that recording the trial by "electronic means" could pollute a jury pool and have a chilling effect on individuals testifying.