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Arizona man sentenced to die for murdering girl by locking her in box


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Arizona man sentenced to die for murdering girl by locking her in box

By David Schwartz

 

PHOENIX (Reuters) - An Arizona man was sentenced to death on Thursday for murdering a 10-year-old girl, by locking her in a footlocker for taking a Popsicle without permission, a court official said.

 

A jury in Phoenix returned the verdict against John Allen, 29, after deliberating for several hours in the July 2011 suffocation death of Ame Deal, the cousin of Allen's wife, said court spokesman Vincent Funari.

 

Allen was convicted of first-degree murder, three counts of child abuse and conspiracy to commit child abuse on Nov. 8. The jury found the murder to be especially cruel and heinous, making him eligible for the death penalty.

 

His wife, Sammantha Allen, was sentenced to death in August, after she was convicted of murder in connection with the child's death. The girl died at the Phoenix home which the Allens shared with other relatives.

 

The child, who was in the Allens' care, was forced to perform exhaustive physical exercise, as temperatures reached into the triple digits, for taking a frozen treat from a refrigerator, police said.

 

The couple then ordered her into a hinged, plastic container that prosecutors said only had small air holes at its handles. John Allen locked her inside the small box, as his wife looked on, police said. The couple then fell asleep.

 

Ame remained inside overnight and was found dead the next morning.

 

An attorney for John Allen could not be reached for comment following the sentencing in Maricopa County Superior Court.

 

"Jonathan Allen, along with his wife, Sammantha, received the only proportionate penalty that could rightly be imposed for the torture and pain they put Ame through," County Attorney Bill Montgomery said in a statement.

 

Police said officers were initially told Deal died as the result of a hide-and-seek game that turned tragic. A police investigation soon revealed the true facts in the case.

 

Ame's aunt and legal guardian, Cynthia Stoltzmann, who is Sammantha Allen's mother, pleaded guilty to child abuse charges in connection with her treatment of the girl, and she is serving a sentence of 24 years in prison. Police said she was not present when the girl was locked in the storage bin.

 

Judith Deal, the child's grandmother, pleaded guilty to attempted child abuse charges and was sentenced to 10 years behind bars, and the girl's father David Deal, also pleaded guilty to attempted child abuse and is serving a 14-year sentence.

 

(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and Lisa Shumaker)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-11-17
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Totally shocking and sad. The entire chain of adults in this girls family all guilty and sentenced - at least that is a good thing. How can people be so wicked? The US needs to worry about cleansing itself from within instead of concerning itself with travel bans and what a fully vetted Syrian refugee might do. I hate to imagine how this girl suffered before she died.

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3 hours ago, Andaman Al said:

The US needs to worry about cleansing itself from within instead of concerning itself with travel bans and what a fully vetted Syrian refugee might do. I hate to imagine how this girl suffered before she died.

I really do not think that this is the place to discuss travel bans for Syrians or refugees 

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Having spent a fair amount of time in Arizona, it is hard to imagine a more horrible way to die.    This and children being left in vehicles in hot, sunny weather.    

 

I am not a fan of the death penalty, but I certainly can't see myself standing in any protest to save either him or the girl's mother.   I can't even see myself wasting a keystroke to write to someone.   

 

 

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12 hours ago, sanemax said:

I really do not think that this is the place to discuss travel bans for Syrians or refugees 

So what shoud we discuss here? Revulsion? Retribution? Our own moral superiority to the subjects discussed? How about what happens when people lose their humanity? The my side is right your side is wrong narrative? The unintended consequences of the loss of social cohesion?  Hey, everything's a part of everything else.

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