After repeated delays in the cold murder trial of Glenna Jean White, jury selection is again underway in Youngstown for the retrial of the man accused of murdering White in 2009.

White was a teen when she disappeared and her body was never found, but during past trials, prosecutors have laid out why they believe the evidence points to 54-year-old Robert Moore.

Numerous attempts in the murder trial of Moore resulted in disruptions for various reasons and Monday marks the chapter of another new trial with jury selection underway in Mahoning County.

The cold murder case stems from 2009 when White went missing. Prosecutors had pointed to evidence indicating White was allegedly at Moore's house in Alliance before the two left together before she disappeared.

However, White's body was never found. Despite the alleged evidence against Moore, prosecutors have to prove not only White is dead, but that Moore murdered her.

The first mistrial happened in May of 2022 when Moore was found not guilty of aggravated murder, but the jury could not reach a decision on a murder charge alone.

When the case was brought back to court in April of 2024, jurors heard testimony from several people including White's mother. That trial ended in a mistrial over an attorney's family emergency.

The third mistrial happened in July 2024 after two juror misconduct incidents were brought to the court's attention.

Moore has been behind bars since December 2021.

While potential jury members were released early Monday around 2 pm, jury selection is set to pick back up Tuesday morning.

If convicted of the one count of murder, Moore faces 25 years to life in prison.