Las Vegas Review-Journal

Two Arizona defendants won’t face death penalty

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A prosecutor in northwest Arizona is abandoning pursuit of the death penalty against the suspects in two high-profile murder cases, citing cost.

Staff attorneys will instead seek conviction­s and life prison sentences for Justin Rector, 29, of Bullhead City and Darrell Ketchner, 59, of Kingman, said Mohave County attorney Matt Smith.

Ketchner faces first-degree murder, attempted murder and other charges in the July 4, 2009, stabbing death of 18-year-old Ariel Allison and the attempted murder of her mother,

Jennifer Allison. The teen was stabbed to death, while her mom, mother of three of Ketchner’s children, survived being shot in the head and stabbed.

Rector is charged in the September 2014 death of his former girlfriend’s daughter, 8-year-old Bella GroganCann­ella. The girl’s body was found in a makeshift grave about a half-mile from her home.

County officials said more than $2.2 million has been spent on defense teams representi­ng Ketchner and Rector.

Neither case is even close to trial, and it will be less expensive to prosecute them because mitigation and expert testimony will be limited if the death penalty is off the table.

“Everybody’s looking to save money, and these death penalty cases are extremely expensive,” Smith said.

The woman was approached by a man wearing a stocking over his face as she was bringing in her garbage cans, according to Metropolit­an Police Department statement. The man forced the woman into the garage and sexually assaulted her, police said.

Police said the man is Hispanic, approximat­ely 6 feet tall, with a muscular build.

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