A new trial that was scheduled to begin Monday for one of the five people convicted in the brutal murder of 15-year-old Seath Jackson in Marion County has been delayed.

Court records showed jury selection for Amber Wright's new trial was scheduled to begin Monday. But Marion County court officials confirmed the trial was continued at a March hearing, and a new date was not immediately set.

Wright, now 19, was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in 2012 for Jackson's murder the year before. Prosecutors said Wright, along with her brother, Kyle Hooper, and three others lured Jackson to a home in Summerfield, where they beat and shot him to death. They then dismembered and burned his remains, hid them in multiple paint cans and threw them in a rock quarry.

In separate cases, all five defendants were found guilty. Wright, Hooper, Charlie Ely and Justin Soto each received a life sentence. Michael Bargo, the accused mastermind behind the killing, was sentenced to death in 2013, becoming the youngest Florida inmate on death row.

Wright was granted a retrial in 2014 after her lawyers successfully argued she wasn't properly informed of her Miranda rights against self-incrimination before confession.

In Wright's first trial, jurors heard her confess on video to her role of luring, torturing and killing Jackson. That video confession will not be played for jurors in her retrial.

Legal analyst Jaya Balani, with the NeJame Law Firm, said the entire case is a lesson for investigators.

"It helps the defense because those confessions that she made prior to Miranda will not be allowed to be introduced to the jury," Balani said. "The jury hears about it, it's a mistrial."

Balani said she thinks the others will also appeal, just like Wright did.

"The others are probably still trying to find appeals," she said, adding Wright's "just probably came up quicker because of the confession issues."

Charlie Ely, the other female convicted in the case, is now represented by defense attorney Jose Baez, the same attorney who represented Casey Anthony.

After Wright was granted a retrial, Seath Jackson's mother, Sonia, said she understood efforts by Wright's family to exonerate her, but added she could not support those efforts.