Arizona man found guilty of murder after
locking girl in box: court official
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[November 09, 2017]
PHOENIX (Reuters) - An Arizona man
was found guilty on Wednesday of murder and other charges in the death
of a 10-year-old girl who was locked in a small bin for taking a
Popsicle without permission, a court official said.
The verdict by the Maricopa County jury allows the trial of John Allen,
29, to move to the penalty phase, in which the panel will determine if
he should face the death penalty, court spokesman Vincent Funari said in
a statement. That phase begins on Thursday and could take weeks, he
said.
Sammantha Allen, John Allen's wife, was sentenced to death in August
after she was also convicted of murder in the 2011 death of 10-year-old
Ame Deal, who was her cousin.
Police said the child, who was left in the Allens' care, was forced to
exercise intensely for hours in the summer heat as punishment for taking
the frozen treat.
The couple then ordered her to get a hinged, plastic container and climb
into it, police have said. Sammantha Allen watched as her husband
padlocked the girl in the box and the couple then fell asleep, police
said.
The dead girl's body was found inside the small container, which only
had tiny air holes at its handles.
The jury found John Allen guilty of first-degree murder, three counts of
child abuse and conspiracy to commit child abuse, officials said.
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Family members initially told police Deal died in a hide-and-seek
game that turned tragic. Police unraveled that story during their
investigation.
In John Allen's trial, jurors watched a video of him confessing to
locking the girl in the box and going to sleep.
Arizona has not executed an inmate in three years. The state's last
execution took nearly two hours, and resulted in a lawsuit by
several inmates who claimed the state's lethal injection protocol
caused prolonged suffering.
John Allen's attorney argued that his client took full
responsibility and did not intend for the girl to die.
Maricopa county prosecutors and Allen' attorney, Gary Beren, could
not be reached for comment late on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles and David Schwartz in
Phoenix; Editing by Paul Tait)
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