The clock is ticking toward a date Tennessee hasn’t faced in nearly 200 years. A woman on death row, a brutal crime from 1995,
and a justice system still wrestling with what it means to punish a teenager for life — or end it.
As the execution nears, the state must decide what justice really lo… Continues…
Three decades after the killing of 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer, the story of Christa Gail Pike refuses to fade into history.
At 18, Pike committed a crime so brutal it stunned Knoxville and quickly became a symbol of unforgiving retribution.
Now 49, she sits as the only woman on Tennessee’s death row, her life defined by a single night and the choices that followed.
Supporters see a traumatized young woman who grew into remorse behind bars; critics see a calculated killer whose sentence reflects the horror of her actions.
As 2026 approaches, the case has become less about one person and more about what kind of justice system
Americans are willing to accept. Whether the execution proceeds or not,
Tennessee is being forced to confront an uncomfortable question:
when punishment becomes permanent, can society ever claim it fully understood the life it chose to end?