A woman accused of stabbing both of her elderly parents at their Mountain Brook home late last year has now been indicted on attempted murder charges, and is back in jail with no bond.

Angela Hontzas, 47, was initially arrested in November 2016. A Jefferson County grand jury indicted her on the charges May 5, and those indictments were made public Tuesday.

Mountain Brook police said they were dispatched about 4 p.m. that Sunday to the family's home in the 3400 block of Oak Canyon Drive on an open 911 call, which means someone dialed 911 but wasn't saying anything. While the officers were en route to the scene, the call was updated indicating that there was a female stabbing victim in the front yard of the residence.

Once officers arrived on the scene, a second stabbing victim exited the house. It was discovered that a husband and wife, both 81, had been stabbed multiple times in a domestic assault by their daughter, Lt. Chuck Clark said at the time.

Angela Hontzas stayed in the home while officers treated the victims, and then turned them over to the medics. She surrendered a short time later. Both victims were transported to UAB Hospital where both underwent surgery, but survived.

Angela Hontzas was taken to Grandview Medical Center the day of the incident, where she was treated and released. Upon her release, she was taken to the Mountain Brook City Jail pending formal warrants. Once those warrants were obtained, - with bonds totaling $250,000 - she was transferred to the Jefferson County Jail.

She remained in the county lockup until she was released April 19. Her attorneys asked for her bond to be reduced from $250,000 to $50,000. According to court records, the attorney argued that Hontzas suffered from mental illness and her parents were supportive of her release to receive mental health treatment.

Hontzas was sent Wade Freedom House in Jacksonville, which provides transitional living for women, and ordered by the judge to stay there and have no contact with her victims.

Prosecutors on April 25 filed a motion to revoke her bond after Hontzas left the rehabilitation center and was picked up by Jacksonville police. "The defendant has, according to Jacksonville PD, exhibited signs of mental distress and has also claimed to be paranoid,'' according to the bond revocation motion.

Hontzas was booked back into the Jefferson County Jail that day. A trial date has not been set in her attempted murder case.