The Arizona Republic

Suspect in killing of Navajo girl expected to change plea

Victim, 11, was kidnapped, assaulted and murdered in New Mexico in 2016

- RUSSELL CONTRERAS

ALBUQUERQU­E - A suspect is expected to change his plea in the kidnapping, sexual assault and killing of an 11year-old girl in a remote part of the largest American Indian reservatio­n that prompted an effort to expand the Amber Alert system into tribal communitie­s across the U.S.

More than a year after the May 2016 death of Ashlynne Mike on the Navajo Nation, Tom Begaye is scheduled to attend a change-of-plea hearing today in an Albuquerqu­e federal court. It’s not known whether his lawyers and federal prosecutor­s have struck a deal.

Begaye previously pleaded not guilty to murder, sexual abuse and other charges.

Begaye is from the small town of Waterflow, near the unincorpor­ated agricultur­al community of Lower Fruitland, where Mike lived with her father and siblings, according to the FBI. The town is near the Navajo reservatio­n.

Begaye lured Mike and her brother into his van, authoritie­s say. The girl’s brother told police the man took them deep into the desert and then walked off with the girl and a tire iron in hand before returning alone.

Begaye told investigat­ors he sexually assaulted the girl and hit her twice in the head with a crowbar, and that she was still moving when he left her in the desert, according to court documents. Her body was later found in the remote area.

The younger brother was able to escape.

Mike’s father filed a lawsuit against the Navajo Nation for failing to have an emergency notificati­on system he said could have saved his daughter’s life.

An Amber Alert wasn’t issued in New Mexico until around 2 a.m. the morning after Mike’s disappeara­nce.

An Amber Alert system for the 27,000-square-mile reservatio­n was proposed years ago but never implemente­d, despite the tribe having been awarded $330,000 in federal funding as part of a U.S. Justice Department pilot project.

Half the money was used to buy equipment such as megaphones and pop-up tents, but the rest went unspent.

The Navajo Nation covers parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.

Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona introduced legislatio­n in April that would expand the notificati­on system to tribal lands. McCain said more than 7,700 American Indian children are listed as missing in the U.S.

Mike’s family and other tribal members are expected to attend the change of plea hearing.

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