Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Teenage killer resentence­d; parole possible

Segerstrom serving life term for murder of 4-year-old girl

- RON WOOD

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A man serving a life sentence for brutally murdering a 4-year-old girl more than 30 years ago is now eligible for parole.

Christophe­r S. Segerstrom was 15 on July 26, 1986, when he took Barbara Thompson into a wooded area behind the

Lewis Plaza Apartments several blocks west of the University of Arkansas. He sexually assaulted her before bashing her head with a rock and suffocatin­g her. He had promised to help the child catch butterflie­s.

Segerstrom, 45, was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life without the possibilit­y of parole.

The U.S. and Arkansas Supreme courts have since ruled juveniles cannot be sentenced to life without parole, and Arkansas changed its law to allow life with the possibilit­y of parole after 30 years in order to comply with the rulings.

Circuit Judge Mark Lindsay resentence­d Segerstrom on Wednesday. Because Segerstrom was given credit at his original sentencing for 11 months jail time served, he’s now eligible to seek parole.

Prosecutor Matt Durrett met with Barbara Thompson’s family for about 15 minutes after the hearing to discuss the parole process.

“It’s still confusing because this is a family that was told 30 years ago that this guy was never, ever going to get out again,” Durrett said. “There’s a lot of confusion, a lot of emotions.”

One family member leaving the courtroom after the hearing told Segerstrom to “rot in hell.”

Durrett said he will oppose parole for Segerstrom.

“As long as I am here and upright, I’m going to do everything I can to keep him from ever breathing free air again,” Durrett said. “What he did to Barbara Thompson is just indicative of someone who needs to be locked up forever.”

Segerstrom was the last of three men sentenced to life without parole for murders they committed as teenagers in Washington County.

James Dean Vancleave was resentence­d last month. Vancleave, 55, of Springdale was convicted of capital murder for killing 23-year-old Debra King.

Vancleave was 16 when he killed King on Jan. 29, 1978, at a convenienc­e store on Elm Springs Road.

Vancleave stabbed King 16 times, slashed her hand 11 times and tried to slash her throat with a small hunting knife to get $30 from her purse. The cash register wasn’t touched.

Lindsay resentence­d Vancleave to the maximum of life with the possibilit­y of parole after serving 30 years.

Dennis Wayne Lewis was ordered released last fall, because in his case, no valid sentencing options were available.

Lewis, 59, of Wichita, Kan., was convicted of capital murder and assault with intent to rob.

Lewis was 17 years and 5 months old when he killed Jared Jerome Cobb at Cobb’s Western Store and Pawn Shop during an armed robbery April 8, 1974. Lewis’ case was one of the oldest in the state, coming before sentencing laws were changed in 1976.

Lindsay signed an order in October that Lewis’ sentence remain vacated, and he was immediatel­y discharged from the Arkansas Department of Correction.

Lewis’ case was unusual among the 56 Arkansas cases in which juvenile life sentences have been vacated, according to his attorneys, L. Gray Dellinger and Larry Kissee. They maintained because state statutes were overturned as unconstitu­tional, no sentencing options were available to the court based on state law in effect at the time Lewis committed his crime.

Durrett said he and others, including the state Attorney General’s Office, studied the issue and, reluctantl­y, came to the conclusion Lewis’ lawyers were correct.

Vancleave and Segerstrom were sentenced under a different law in effect at the time.

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