Barr orders resumption of executions; Navajo among those targeted

Ordered girl to “lay down and die”

prison bars
(Photo by Jenn Vargas/Creative Commons)

By Staff

WASHINGTON — Attorney General William Barr ordered a resumption of federal executions Thursday and named a Navajo double-murderer as one of the first five death-row inmates who will be put to death.

Lezmond Mitchell will be executed on Dec. 11 with a fatal injection of pentobarbital if all goes according to the plan announced Thursday by the Justice Department and the U.S. Bureau of Prisons.

Mitchell was convicted on 11 counts in connection with the grisly beating and stabbing deaths of Alyce Slim, 63, and her 9-year-old granddaughter in 2001 near Sawmill on the Navajo Nation. He is currently the only Native American on federal death row, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Related story

Conviction, death sentence upheld in 2001 Navajo double murder

In ordering the Bureau of Prisons to start scheduling executions again, Barr said he focused on inmates convicted of “murdering, and in some cases torturing and raping, the most vulnerable in our society – children and the elderly.”

Barr also ordered the bureau to replace its current three-drug for executions with the single drug, that he said has been used in more than 200 executions in 14 states and has withstood legal challenges.

[metaslider id=65385]

 

If the five executions occur as scheduled – beginning on Dec. 9 and continuing at regular intervals through Jan. 15 – they would be the first executions in the federal prisons in more than 20 years, Barr said.

According to court documents, federal prosecutors in Mitchell’s case originally opted against the death penalty, in the face of opposition from the Navajo Nation and from the victims’ family. But that decision was overruled by then-Attorney General John Ashcroft and prosecutors sought, and won, a death sentence in the case.

The case began when Mitchell and others abducted Slim and her granddaughter on Oct. 28, 2001, in Slim’s pickup truck, which they planned to use later to rob a trading post on the Navajo Nation.

The men ended up killing Slim by stabbing her 33 times, then dumping her body in the back of the truck, where her granddaughter was forced to sit with the body. They later dragged Slim’s body out of the truck and ordered the girl to “lay down and die,” slitting her throat and then, when she did not die, dropping heavy rocks on her head to kill her.

They later tried to cover their tracks by burying their victims’ heads and hands in a hole and dragging their dismembered torsos into the woods before burning the victims’ clothes and belongings.

Mitchell and two other men were in Slim’s truck three days later when they robbed the Red Rock Trading Post at gunpoint before driving off. They later burned Slim’s truck.

Defense experts at Mitchell’s trial determined that he had mental and emotional problems and a distant mother, that he had substance-abuse issues and was likely abused as a child.

But they also described him as a borderline sociopath who denied he was intoxicated at the time of the killing, who talked calmly about killing the girl and who had a history of “swinging dogs and cats by their tails and then throwing them off bridges just for fun.”

Mitchell was convicted on 11 counts, including two counts of first-degree murder, carjacking resulting in death and robbery, among others. He could not be executed for the murders under federal and Navajo law – but because carjacking falls under another section of federal law, he could face the death penalty for that.

It was in part because of that “loophole” in federal law that an appeals court judge in 2015 argued that Mitchell should get a new trial because his attorneys were ineffective.

But his opinion was the dissent in a ruling that upheld the conviction, with the majority of court panel saying Mitchell’s attorneys were “thorough in the extreme” and had to make difficult choices to construct a defense in a crime of “unusual brutality.”

Circuit Judge Stephen Reinhardt, the dissenting judge in that case, wrote then that Mitchell could “suffer the ignominious fate of becoming the first person to be executed for an intra-Indian crime that occurred in Indian country.”

About Cronkite News 4041 Articles
Cronkite News is the news division of Arizona PBS. The daily news products are produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.