Jury recommends death for killer
Kansas City, Mo. ? A federal jury decided Friday that a woman convicted of killing an expectant mother and cutting her baby from her womb should receive the death penalty.
Jurors deliberated more than five hours before recommending the sentence for Lisa Montgomery. Judge Gary Fenner will sentence Montgomery, but he had told jurors he was obligated to abide by their recommendation. A sentencing date has not been set.
Montgomery, 39, was convicted Monday of kidnapping and killing Bobbie Jo Stinnett on Dec. 16, 2004, in the victim’s home in the northwest Missouri town of Skidmore. She was arrested the next day in Melvern, Kan., where she was showing off the newborn as her own.
Montgomery wiped her eyes with a tissue as she was led from the courtroom after the jury announced its sentencing decision. Her attorney, Fred Duchardt, had his hand on her shoulder as the sentence was announced.
When the jurors were asked if they agreed with the decision, each responded: “Yes, your honor.” Afterward, the jury asked to speak to prosecutors and defense attorneys. Prosecutors said the jurors thanked them. Jurors left the courthouse without speaking to reporters.
U.S. Attorney John Wood said he was confident justice had been served.
“I know that nothing we do can erase the pain that the family members feel,” Wood said during a news conference after the verdict was read. “I only hope that they find some measure of justice in this outcome.”
Duchardt said he was saddened by the result.
“Obviously the jury had a hard time getting past the gravity of the offense,” he said. “Lisa is a fragile, wonderful person. She is heartsick over what happened to Bobbie Jo and her mother and her family.”
Lisa Montgomery’s husband, Kevin, and his parents were not in the courtroom when the verdict was read but came in as the jurors left. Outside the courthouse, Kevin Montgomery criticized prosecutors.
“The prosecutors gave you a circus,” he told reporters. “It’s pretty bad when you think there’s a winner in this.”
Stinnett’s mother, Becky Harper, thanked the law enforcement officers who rescued her granddaughter, Victoria Jo.
“The case has finally come to a close, but we will never stop missing Bobbie Jo,” Harper said, crying and surrounded by family members. “She was a sweet and loving wife, daughter and sister and would have been a wonderful mother. Our priority now is Victoria Jo. We want her life to be as normal as possible.”
Nodaway County Sheriff Ben Espey, who helped perform CPR on Stinnett’s lifeless body, said the community had been awaiting the death sentence for nearly three years.
“It was bad, it was awful,” he said of the bloody crime scene. “It’s something that nobody wants to walk into, but knowing that her mother was trying to do CPR, I felt like I had to continue.”
Prosecutors argued that Stinnett’s killing and mutilation is the kind of crime for which capital punishment is intended.
Showing jurors photos of the bloody crime scene, the prosecution told jurors Thursday that Montgomery deserves to die because of the heinousness of her crime, and because computer evidence – including Internet searches on performing Caesareans – shows the crime was premeditated.
Federal prosecutor Roseann Ketchmark said Montgomery had violated Stinnett in the “most wicked way possible,” then failed to seek medical attention for the infant, who was four weeks shy of her due date.
Duchardt, who claims sexual abuse during Montgomery’s childhood led to mental illness, asked the jury to spare his client’s life. He said emotional abuse from her mother and sexual abuse from her stepfather “killed Lisa’s soul.”
“I’m not ashamed to ask you all for mercy,” Duchardt told the jury. “I ask for it on behalf of Lisa and all the people who love her.”
Prosecutors claimed Montgomery was faking mental illness to aid her defense. They also noted that few of the many people who have been sexually abused go on to kill.
Ketchmark showed jurors crime scene photos highlighting the blows to Stinnett’s head, injuries to her elbows, defensive cuts to her hands and strangulation marks.
“Look at the ragged abdominal cuts,” she said. “This is vicious. This defendant mutilated her.”
Ketchmark also described how the gruesome death had hurt Stinnett’s family, particularly her husband, Zeb, who was forced to raise their daughter alone, and Harper, who found her daughter’s body.




