Prosecutors describe Mo. teen as thrill killer

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – A Missouri teenager who confessed to murdering a 9-year-old girl faces the possibility of life in prison when she's sentenced this morning.

Prosecutors described Alyssa Bustamante, 18, as a thrill killer who lacked remorse. Defense attorneys said she was a disturbed child who deserved the chance of freedom one day.

The trial's conclusion follows days of testimony in a small courtroom in Missouri's capital city. Proceedings descended into chaos Tuesday as prosecutor Mark Richardson made an impassioned request for a lifelong sentence for Bustamante, who pleaded guilty to murdering Elizabeth Olten, a neighbor, in October 2009.

Bustamante's grandmother and grandfather stormed out of the courtroom. That prompted Bustamante – who had been staring blankly downward as Richardson recounted her crime – to begin silently crying for the first time in her court proceedings that have spanned more than two years.

Then as Cole County Circuit Judge Pat Joyce announced that she would reveal her sentence today, Elizabeth's grandmother interrupted and cried out from her wheelchair.

"I think Alyssa should get out of jail the same day Elizabeth gets out of the grave!" declared the grandmother, whom a prosecutor later identified as Sandy Corn.

The disorder capped an emotional, two-day sentencing hearing highlighted by repeated references to words Bustamante had written in her diary on the night she strangled, slit the throat of and repeatedly stabbed Elizabeth. Bustamante, then 15, wrote that it was an "ahmazing" and "pretty enjoyable" experience, ending the entry by saying: "I gotta go to church now...lol."

"The motive has to be the most senseless, reprehensible that could be in humankind, and that is to take a life for a thrill," Richardson said.

Richardson recounted in the courtroom how hundreds of volunteers had searched for Elizabeth near the rural town of St. Martins as Bustamante calmly lied, at least initially, to investigators about the girl's whereabouts.

The prosecutor urged the judge to impose the maximum sentence for second-degree murder, life in prison with the possibility of parole, and an additional 71 years in prison for armed criminal action, which he said would have matched Elizabeth's remaining life expectancy. Richardson also urged that the sentences be served consecutively, meaning Bustamante would be an elderly woman before she ever got a chance at parole.

Previous Page|1|||

Reader Poll

What grade would you give to the police response for the NATO summit protesters?

A
B
C
D
F