Jurors heard opening statements after a brief delay Wednesday morning in the murder trial of a Pinellas County woman who gained famed years ago as the "hiccup girl."

Jennifer Mee, 22, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of 22-year-old Shannon Griffin. She is one of three defendants to stand trial in Griffin's 2010 robbery and murder.

A psychological evaluation was ordered after Mee's attorney, John Trevena, told the judge he just learned his client suffers from schizophrenia. The doctor told the judge that Mee was competent to stand trial.

The psychologist also said Mee told her she was hallucinating and hearing voices. The doctor also said she believed Mee has a low intelligence level.

Prosecutors asked the judge to keep Mee's mental disorder and intelligence level out of the trial and the judge agreed.

A jury was seated Tuesday.

Mee made international headlines after video of her uncontrollable hiccups went viral. Attempts to stop the hiccups briefly kept her in the limelight. She tried home remedies and consulted medical specialists, a hypnotist and an acupuncturist, until the hiccups finally stopped on their own. She appeared on several TV shows, including the "Today" show.

Prosecutors say Mee lured Griffin through text messages to a St. Petersburg home under the pretense of buying marijuana. Once there, two of Mee's friends, Lamont Newton and Laron Raiford, robbed him at gunpoint. Griffin struggled with the suspects and was shot several times.

Detectives said Mee accepted a friend request from Griffin on a social networking website five or six days before the robbery.

Prosecutor Chris Labruzzo told the jury Mee admitted to her mom in a jailhouse call that she set up the botched robbery that led to the murder.

"She's going to tell you through that call, just like she told the detectives in this case, that she set everything up,” Labruzzo said in his opening statement.

Trevena said there's no proof Mee sent those text messages to Griffin. Instead, he blamed the victim's murder on a love triangle between Mee's friends, Raiford and Jennifer Charron.

"Mr. Raiford became aware that Jennifer Charron had been texting the victim," Trevena said.

Prosecutors showed the jury St. Petersburg Police video of the crime scene that night.

The victim's cousin took the stand and told the jury that Griffin had passed a drug test for his new job and appeared excited to go on a date that night.

"He said that he was going to go see a young lady and that was it. He was preparing for that and from there he got dressed," said Douglas Bolden, the victim's cousin. "Put on his best gear and all I remember at the last ending time of seeing him, was him smelling like a bunch of cologne. It was just, my whole house had cologne in it."

The crime scene video showed the victim's body and his jeans were pulled down a little but his boxers were still on. Trevena says that along with an open condom found at the scene backs up the love triangle theory.

Police say Mee rifled through the victim's pockets after the murder and that's why his pants were down.

Raiford, convicted as being the gunman, was sentenced to life in prison last month. Newton has yet to go on trial. If convicted, Mee could face life in prison.

Even though Mee isn't accused of pulling the trigger, under Florida law she can be charged with first-degree murder for planning to commit felony robbery.

Trevena said he offered prosecutors a plea deal of 15 years in prison for her role in the incident, but prosecutors turned that down.

The trial will resume at 9:15 a.m. on Thursday.