Missouri executes a man for sexually assaulting and strangling a
9-year-old girl in 2007
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[December 04, 2024]
By JIM SALTER
BONNE TERRE, Mo. (AP) — Rowan Ford knew Christopher Collings as “Uncle
Chris” after he spent several months living with her family. On Tuesday,
Collings was executed for sexually assaulting and killing the child,
then dumping her body in a sinkhole outside a small Missouri town.
Collings, 49, was put to death with a single dose of pentobarbital on
Tuesday evening at the state prison in Bonne Terre, Missouri. The
execution was the 23rd in the U.S. this year and the fourth in Missouri.
Only Alabama with six and Texas with five have performed more executions
in 2024.
Collings spoke with a spiritual adviser who was at his side as the
process began. Shortly thereafter, the inmate appeared to breathe
heavily and swallow hard. After a few seconds, all movement stopped. He
was officially declared dead nine minutes after the injection.
Collings’ fate was sealed Monday when the U.S. Supreme Court turned
aside an appeal and Republican Gov. Mike Parson denied clemency.
“Right or wrong I accept this situation for what it is,” Collings said
in a written final statement. “To anyone that I have hurt in this life I
am sorry. I hope that you are able to get closure and move on.” He
added, “I hope to see you in heaven one day.”
Parson, in a statement, said he hopes that “all those who knew and loved
Rowan may find peace in knowing that justice has been done.”
Rowan was a fourth-grader described by teachers at Collings’ trial as a
hard-working and happy student, a lover of Barbie who had her room
painted pink. Collings was a friend of Rowan’s stepfather, David Spears,
and lived for several months in 2007 at the home Rowan shared with her
mother, Colleen Munson, and Spears. Collings sometimes helped Rowan with
her homework.
Collings told authorities that he drank heavily and smoked marijuana
with Spears and another man in the hours before the attack on Rowan,
according to court records. Collings said he picked up the
still-sleeping child from her bed, took her to the camper where he
lived, and assaulted her.
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Collings planned to take Rowan back home, leading her outside the
camper facing away from him so that she couldn’t identify him, he
said in his confession. But when moonlight lit up the darkness,
Rowan was able to see Collings, he told police. He said he “freaked
out,” grabbed a rope from a nearby pickup truck, and strangled her.
Munson returned home from work at 9 a.m. on Nov. 3 and was alarmed
when she couldn’t find Rowan, walking the neighborhood looking for
her. Court records said Spears insisted Rowan was at a friend’s
house. But when Rowan failed to return home by the afternoon, the
mother called the police, prompting a massive search.
Collings, Spears and the third man became the focus of police
attention because they were the last people seen at Rowan’s home.
Collings confessed to the crime and told police that after killing
Rowan, he took the body to a sinkhole. He burned the rope used in
the attack, along with the clothes he was wearing and his
blood-stained mattress, prosecutors said.
Court documents and the clemency petition said Spears also
implicated himself in the crimes. A transcript of Spears’ statement
to police, cited in the clemency petition, said Spears told police
that Collings handed him a cord and Spears killed Rowan.
“I choke her with it. I realize she’s gone. She’s ... she’s really
gone,” Spears said, according to the transcript. Meanwhile, court
documents said it was Spears who led authorities to the sinkhole
where the body was found.
But Spears was allowed to plead to lesser charges. It wasn’t clear
why. Prosecutors at the original trial didn’t respond to messages
seeking comment.
Spears served more than seven years in prison before being released
in 2015. No phone listing for him could be found.
Collings’ attorney, Jeremy Weis, said the inmate was a loving father
and a changed man in prison and didn't deserve to die, despite his
crimes.
“We share Chris's desire that his death will provide a measure of
closure for the victim's family and that the people hurt by him will
be able to carry on,” Weis said in a statement. “What occurred
today, though, was an act of vengeance, but it will not define
Chris, nor will it be how we remember him.”
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