Jill Biden’s Ex-Husband Pleads Not Guilty in Wife’s Death
William Stevenson pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder after his wife Linda, 64, was found unresponsive at their home on Dec. 28, 2025.
Overview
William Stevenson, 77, pleaded not guilty to a first-degree murder charge in the death of his wife, Linda Stevenson, 64.
Police found Linda Stevenson unresponsive at the couple's residence in New Castle County on Dec. 28, 2025, and she was later pronounced dead, authorities said.
Linda Stevenson’s daughter wrote that the family is grieving and urged the public to focus on her mother’s life rather than her link to public figures, according to a Facebook post.
Stevenson has remained in custody after failing to post bail, with reported bail amounts ranging roughly $500,000 to $2 million, and he is being held at the Howard Young Correctional Institution, authorities said.
His next court appearance is scheduled for March 16.
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FAQ
The search results indicate that a New Castle County grand jury charged Stevenson with first-degree murder in February 2026 following a multi-week investigation involving forensic analysis and witness interviews. However, police have not publicly detailed the specific evidence underlying the indictment, and the results of Linda Stevenson's post-mortem examination have not been revealed.
Linda Stevenson, 64, was found unresponsive at the couple's home in Wilmington, Delaware on December 28, 2025. Police were called to the residence shortly after 11pm for a reported domestic dispute, and they discovered her unresponsive in the living room.[2] She was later pronounced dead at the location.[4]
William Stevenson and Jill Biden (then Jill Jacobs) were married from 1970 to 1975, a union of five years. They met in 1969 in Ocean City, New Jersey, and married when Jill was 18 and a student at Brandywine Junior College. After their divorce, Jill met then-Senator Joe Biden in March 1975 and married him in 1977.
Linda Stevenson, 64, ran a bookkeeping business and was described in her obituary as a family-oriented mother and grandmother and a Philadelphia Eagles fan. Her daughter, Christine Mae, remembered her as someone whose "one hug from her and all your worries would disappear," highlighting her compassionate nature and importance to her family.
William Stevenson founded the Stone Balloon, a popular music venue located near the University of Delaware in Newark, Delaware, in the early 1970s. The venue became a landmark in American college-town culture and was once referred to by Rolling Stone as "one of the best kept secrets in Rock and Roll," hosting major artists over the decades.
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