The man caught on camera allegedly trying to kidnap a girl from a west Georgia Wal-Mart in February remained jailed Tuesday, and if the Haralson County District Attorney gets his wish, jail is where the suspect will remain until his trial.

District Attorney Bobby Brooks told Channel 2 Action News he plans to hold a special session of the grand jury to seek indictments in the case against Thomas Andrew Woods of Austell.

Under state law, a person who has been incarcerated without bond becomes eligible for bond after 90 days if the case has not been indicted, Brooks told Channel 2.

The grand jury in Haralson County was not scheduled to meet before the 90-day period was up in the Woods case, so Brooks is holding a special session that will begin next Friday.

Woods, 25, allegedly started talking to 7-year-old Brittney Baxter in the toy aisle of the Bremen Wal-Mart on Feb. 8, then grabbed her and put his hand around her mouth, police said.

Video surveillance footage from the store shows Brittney kicking and screaming, and a man who appears to be Woods setting her down. Store cameras also captured images of the suspect's car, and police tracked it to Tallapoosa, a few miles away.

Woods was arrested and charged with attempted kidnapping, false imprisonment, cruelty to children, simple assault, marijuana possession and driving on a suspended license, a spokeswoman for the Haralson County Jail previously told the AJC.

Woods was on probation at the time of his arrest for a voluntary manslaughter conviction, according to police.

A former Tucker resident, Woods was arrested in October 2004 after using a credit card belonging to an uncle, James Michael Price, who had been reported missing in July of that year, according to an arrest warrant obtained by the AJC.

Woods, then 17, confessed to killing Price and led police to his body, according to his court ruling.

But the confession was made before the attorney W0ods requested was present, violating his Fifth Amendment rights. He pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter, a lesser charge than homicide.

Woods was released in October from the Wheeler Correctional Facility, where he had been since April 2007 following the manslaughter conviction in DeKalb County, according to the state Department of Corrections. He was placed on probation after serving out his sentence.