A 71-year-old Morris woman has been indicted for claiming nearly $168,000 in Social Security widow's benefits on the death of her husband, who she killed 29 years ago.

A federal grand jury in Birmingham indicted Opal Elaine Tillman with five counts of wire fraud for causing the SSA to wire benefit payments, which Tillman was not entitled to receive, to her Regions Bank account in Jefferson County between May 2012 and September 2016, according to an announcement made Monday by Acting U.S. Attorney Robert O. Posey and Social Security Administration, Office of Inspector General, Special Agent in Charge Margaret Moore-Jackson. A sixth count charges Tillman with theft of government property for stealing more than $100,000 from the SSA. The indictment seeks to have Tillman forfeit $167,830 to the government as proceeds of illegal activity.

In an unrelated case, Tillman was arrested in 2015 on charges that she stole thousands of dollars from an elderly couple she was supposed to be caring for. In that case, she pleaded guilty last month to financial exploitation of the elderly and was sentenced to 10 years in prison with 18 months to serve.

Tillman was convicted in Mobile in June 1988 for killing her husband, Walter R. Tillman, on March 1, 1987. The month he died, according to federal authorities, his widow applied for Social Security Title II benefits on her husband's work record. Title II benefits encompass old age, survivor and disability insurance payments. According to the U.S. Attorney's press release, Tillman wrote in her application "if I am convicted of felonious homicide, any social security monies I receive on Mr. Tillman's Social Security record will constitute an overpayment and I will be liable to repay this money." She then asked that the monthly benefits to her and her children begin as soon as possible.

While Tillman was in prison in November 1988, the SSA notified her of an overpayment of benefits. They explained to her, "A person who has been convicted of the felonious and intentional homicide of a wage earner cannot be entitled to monthly benefits, underpayments, or the lump-sum death payment on the earnings reord of that wage earner."

Tillman was sentenced to 35 years in prison for her husband's death, but in December 1996 was released from prison into the Jefferson County Community Corrections program.

In 2009, federal authorities say, she applied by telephone to the SSA for widow's benefits on the work record of her dead husband. For the application, she provided his Social Security number, dates of birth and death, and verification of their marriage. She began receiving those benefits on Nov. 9, 2009 on the work record of the man she killed, according to the indictment. Those monthly payments continued until Sept. 14, 2016.

The maximum penalty for wire fraud is 20 years in prison and a $250.000 fine. The maximum penalty for theft of government property is 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Two years ago, Tillman was working as a housekeeper and caregiver for an elderly Jefferson County couple. The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office received a complaint that she had stolen cash and property from an 87-year-old woman and her husband.

Family members told investigators they had noticed several suspicious transactions on the victims' checking account. Tillman had been working as a housekeeper for the victims in 2011 on a part-time basis, but had taken on more responsibilities as the wife's health declined.

In all, authorities said, Tillman stole more than $60l,000 from the couple. "I think there is a special place for people that take advantage of our senior citizens, most especially those placed in a position of trust," Jefferson County sheriff's Chief Deputy Randy Christian said at the time.

Tillman pleaded guilty to those charges on April 4, 2017. She is currently listed as an inmate at Julia Tutwiler Prison for Women. Alabama Department of Corrections records indicate her parole on the murder charge has been revoked. Her minimum release date is 2023, but she will come up for a parole hearing next year on the state charges.

A trial date on the new, federal charges has not been announced.