Killer of Navajo Nation girl gets life prison sentence
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A man who pleaded guilty to the murder and sexual assault of an 11-year-old girl on the largest American Indian reservation was sentenced Friday to life in prison in a case that drew national attention over abducted Native American children.
Tom Begaye was sentenced by U.S. District Judge William P. Johnson in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for the May 2016 killing of Ashlynne Mike on the Navajo Nation.
Her abduction and killing prompted calls to expand the Amber Alert missing child notification system and the death penalty to U.S. tribal communities. The alert system has not been fully adopted.
Begaye stood motionless as Mike’s mother, Pamela Foster, called him a “monster” who took away her daughter.
“I have tried to get up each day on a positive note, and this is not possible because I still miss my sweet baby,” Foster said.
Prosecutors said Begaye lured Mike and her younger brother into his van after the pair got out of school.
After realizing they were in danger, the siblings “reached out discreetly and held hands” before Begaye took Mike from the van to a secluded desert area, where he raped her and killed her with a crowbar, prosecutor Niki Tapia-Brito said.
Tapia-Brito said Begaye then left the boy near the famed Shiprock rock formation that rises more than 1,500 feet above the isolated desert spot. The boy found his way to a highway, Tapia-Brito said.
Ashlynne was reported missing, but an Amber Alert that would have sent information about missing children via cellphone messages and information to the media did not go out until the next day.
Her body was later found in an area near the Arizona-New Mexico border.
Begaye agreed in August to plead guilty and faced a mandatory life sentence without parole.