<p>Nearly four years after two real estate agents were stripped naked, robbed and fatally shot in their Cobb County office, a jury convicted a man Tuesday who told police he likely murdered the women but couldn't remember.</p><p>Stacey Ian Humphreys faces the death penalty in the Nov. 3, 2003, slayings of 33-year-old Cyndi Williams and 21-year-old Lori Brown. Jurors will begin the sentencing phase of his trial Wednesday.</p><p>The jury of 10 women and two men spent about 4 1/2 hours deliberating before reaching a verdict Tuesday evening. Jurors found Humphreys guilty on all counts _ murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, kidnapping and armed robbery.</p><p>Humphreys, 34, fixed his eyes on the defense table and showed no emotion when the verdict was read. Relatives of the slain women cried quietly in the courtroom.</p><p>Prosecutors said Humphreys attacked the two women because he needed money to make a $565 payment on his Dodge Durango truck.</p><p>A co-worker found their bodies, stripped naked and bloody from gunshots to the backs of their heads, inside their sales office at a subdivision in the Atlanta suburb of Powder Springs.</p><p>In her closing argument Tuesday, prosecutor Eleanor Dixon read from a transcript of a taped interview Humphreys gave to police after his arrest. Humphreys told investigators he didn't remember committing the crime, but believed he was guilty.</p><p>"I know I did it," Humphreys said on the tape, which jurors reviewed during their deliberations. "I know it just as well as my own name."</p><p>Dixon ended her closing argument in the trial Tuesday morning by standing just a few feet from Humphreys' courtroom seat and pointing a finger straight at his face.</p><p>"That man sitting right there brutally shot these two women in their workplace, and his only thought was for himself," Dixon said as Humphreys averted his eyes. "To take their money, to take their ATM cards, so he could make a truck payment."</p><p>Dixon said Humphreys, who had been paroled in 2002 after serving prison time for theft, staked out Williams and Brown's office the day of the slayings. They were alone when he held them hostage with a handgun, made them undress and forced them to give him the access codes to their bank cards, she said.</p><p>Jimmy Berry, Humphreys' attorney, asked jurors Tuesday to consider Humphreys' actions after the killings, and whether they matched the thinking of a cold, methodical killer.</p><p>Why didn't Humphreys dispose of the gun between Georgia and Wisconsin, Berry asked, and why did he show up for an appointment with his parole officer shortly after the killings?</p><p>"Is it not strange that you'd go to your parole officer on the very day this occurred?" Berry said.</p><p>Berry said Humphreys would suffer memory lapses and had previously found himself in New Mexico and South Carolina without recalling how he'd gotten there.</p><p>When police asked him about the slayings, Berry said, Humphreys replied: "The harder I try to remember, my mind just goes to thinking about something else."</p><p>Superior Court Judge Dorothy Robinson moved the trial more than 300 miles away to the Georgia coast because of pretrial publicity.</p><p>Prosecutors presented testimony from more than 50 witnesses over the past week. Humphreys' lawyer called no witnesses in his defense.</p><p>Police arrested Humphreys after a high-speed chase in Wisconsin, where he fled four days after the slayings. They found a 9mm Ruger handgun in his rented Jeep.</p><p>Berry didn't dispute much of the physical evidence in the case _ that blood matching Williams and Brown's DNA was found on the gun and a floor mat in Humphreys' truck, and that ballistics tests matched two bullets at the crime scene to the gun.</p><p>But he questioned why prosecutors showed no evidence about a third bullet police know was fired in the real estate office.</p>