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    Disgusting act death row inmate did after murder as US state prepares to execute first woman in over 200 years

    Kelly WhitewoodBy Kelly WhitewoodJune 23, 20265 Mins Read

    If the execution proceeds as planned, Pike will become the first woman executed in Tennessee in more than 200 years and only the 19th woman executed in the United States since modern capital punishment resumed in 1976.

    The case remains one of the most horrifying crimes in recent American history.

    Back in January 1995, Pike and 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer were both students at the Knoxville Job Corps center, a federal education and vocational training program.

    According to prosecutors, Pike became consumed by jealousy after convincing herself that Slemmer was interested in her boyfriend.

    That jealousy eventually turned deadly.

     

    Authorities said Pike lured Slemmer into a wooded area near the campus alongside two accomplices.

    Over the course of roughly an hour, the attack escalated into unimaginable brutality.

    Court records stated that Pike beat, stabbed, and tortured the young woman before carving a pentagram into her chest.

    The crime became even more disturbing after investigators learned Pike had allegedly kept a fragment of Slemmer’s skull and later showed it to classmates as a trophy.

    When a groundskeeper discovered Slemmer’s body the following day, the injuries were so severe that he initially believed he had found the remains of an animal.

    The case quickly dominated headlines nationwide and became known as the “Job Corps murder.”

    What happened next only added to the horror.

    Several hours after authorities secured the crime scene, Pike reportedly returned to the area herself.

    Witnesses said she casually approached officers and began asking questions about whether investigators had identified the victim and exactly where the body had been discovered.

    One officer later testified that Pike seemed unusually cheerful and animated.

    “She was giggling and moving around,” the officer told the court.

    Investigators arrested her the very next day.

    In March 1996, a jury consisting of seven men and five women convicted Pike of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder.

    She was sentenced to death.

    Despite her earlier behavior, Pike reportedly broke down when the sentence was announced.

    “Can I please hug my mom before I go? Please let me just hug my mom,” she cried in court.

    Her mother, Carissa Hansen, was sitting behind her, weeping.

    During the trial, Hansen delivered heartbreaking testimony about her own failures as a parent.

    She admitted allowing Pike to have a live-in boyfriend at just 14 years old and confessed that she had used drugs and smoked marijuana with her daughter in an effort to maintain a relationship with her.

    “I should be the one in her seat,” Hansen told the court. “I should be punished for her crimes.”

    Today, Pike’s case remains highly unusual.

    Women make up only a tiny percentage of death row inmates in the United States.

    According to available statistics, there are currently only a few dozen women on death row nationwide compared to thousands of men incarcerated for capital offenses.

    Now 49 years old, Pike has spent nearly 30 years in prison, much of it in near-solitary confinement as Tennessee’s only female death row inmate.

    Over the years, she has expressed remorse for her actions.

    In a letter previously sent to The Tennessean, Pike acknowledged responsibility while arguing that she is no longer the same person she was as a teenager.

    “Think back to the worst mistake you made as a reckless teenager,” Pike wrote.

    “Mine happened to be huge, unforgettable and ruined countless lives… It sickens me now to think that someone as loving and compassionate as myself had the ability to commit such a crime.”

    Her legal team continues to argue that her age at the time of the crime, combined with severe trauma and mental health conditions, should spare her from execution.

    Her attorneys have cited diagnoses that include bipolar disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from years of abuse.

    They are seeking to have her sentence reduced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

    For Colleen Slemmer’s family, however, decades of pain have not softened their position.

    Her mother, May Martinez, has repeatedly said she wants the sentence carried out.

    “There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think about Colleen or how she died and how rough it was,” she told reporters.

    “I just want Christa down so I can end it.”

    Unless appeals or clemency efforts succeed, Pike will be executed at Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville.

    If it happens, the execution will mark a historic moment for Tennessee and become one of the rare instances in modern American history in which a woman receives the death penalty.

    Even after nearly 30 years, the case continues to spark intense debate about justice, rehabilitation, mental health, and whether someone who committed a horrific crime as a teenager should ultimately pay with their life.

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