US state set to execute first woman in over 200 years – her horrific crime 

The state of Tennessee may soon carry out its first execution of a woman in more than two centuries after the Tennessee Supreme Court approved a request to move forward with the death sentence of Christa Gail Pike. Pike, now 49 and the only woman on Tennessee’s death row, was just 18 when she committed one of the state’s most infamous murders.

On January 12, 1995, Pike lured 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer into a wooded area near the University of Tennessee’s agricultural campus. Both were students in the Knoxville Job Corps program, but investigators later said Pike had become convinced that Slemmer was interested in her boyfriend, 17-year-old Tadaryl Shipp. Jealousy quickly escalated into a brutal, premeditated attack.

With the help of Shipp and another student, Shadolla Peterson, Pike slashed Slemmer’s throat with a box cutter, struck her with a meat cleaver, carved a pentagram onto her chest, and crushed her skull with a piece of asphalt. The crime stunned investigators and the public alike.

One of the most chilling revelations emerged when Pike showed detectives a fragment of Slemmer’s skull that she had kept as a trophy. Retired detective Randy York recalled that Pike was disturbingly cheerful during questioning and demonstrated how the skull fragment fit into the wound “like a puzzle.”

Pike was convicted of first-degree murder in 1996 and sentenced to death. Shipp received life without parole, while Peterson, who cooperated with investigators, received probation. Nearly a decade later, Pike earned an additional 25-year sentence after attempting to strangle another inmate in 2004.

After decades of appeals, the state formally requested an execution date, now set for September 30, 2026. Pike’s attorneys continue to argue that her age, trauma history, and mental health diagnoses — including bipolar disorder and PTSD — should weigh heavily against execution.

Her defense team describes her childhood as marked by severe abuse and neglect and says she has since shown remorse. If carried out, her execution would be Tennessee’s first of a woman since 1820, underscoring the rarity and complexity of the case.

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