Utah judge rules a convicted killer with dementia is competent to be
executed
[June 07, 2025]
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A convicted killer in Utah who developed
dementia while on death row for 37 years is competent enough to be
executed, a state judge ruled late Friday.
Ralph Leroy Menzies, 67, was sentenced to die in 1988 for killing Utah
mother of three Maurine Hunsaker. Despite his recent cognitive decline,
Menzies “consistently and rationally understands" what is happening and
why he is facing execution, Judge Matthew Bates wrote in a court order. |

Ralph Leroy Menzies appears in Third District Court for a competency
hearing in West Jordan, Utah, Monday, Nov 18, 2024. (Rick Egan/The Salt
Lake Tribune via AP, Pool, File) |
“Menzies has not shown by a preponderance of the evidence that
his understanding of his specific crime and punishment has
fluctuated or declined in a way that offends the Eighth
Amendment,” which prohibits cruel and unusual punishments, Bates
said.
Menzies had previously selected a firing squad as his method of
execution. He would become only the sixth U.S. prisoner executed
by firing squad since 1977.
The Utah Attorney General’s Office is expected to file a death
warrant soon.
Menzies’ lawyers, who had argued his dementia was so severe that
he could not understand why he was being put to death, said they
plan to appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court.
“Ralph Menzies is a severely brain-damaged, wheelchair-bound,
67-year-old man with dementia and significant memory problems,”
his attorney, Lindsey Layer, said in a statement. “It is deeply
troubling that Utah plans to remove Mr. Menzies from his
wheelchair and oxygen tank to strap him into an execution chair
and shoot him to death.”
The U.S. Supreme Court has spared others prisoners with dementia
from execution, including an Alabama man in 2019 who had killed
a police officer.
Over nearly four decades, attorneys for Menzies filed multiple
appeals that delayed his death sentence, which had been
scheduled at least twice before it was pushed back.
Hunsaker, a 26-year-old married mother of three, was abducted by
Menzies from the convenience store where she worked. She was
later found strangled and her throat cut at a picnic area in the
Wasatch Mountains of northern Utah. Menzies had Hunsaker’s
wallet and several other belongings when he was jailed on
unrelated matters. He was convicted of first-degree murder and
other crimes.
Matt Hunsaker, who was 10 years old when his mother was killed,
said Friday that the family was overwhelmed with emotion to know
that justice would finally be served.
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