Federal prosecutors are seeking a life sentence for a Montana bride who killed her new husband by pushing him off a cliff at Glacier National Park during an argument and after expressing misgivings about their marriage.
The bride, 22-year-old Jordan Graham, struck a deal with prosecutors in December and pleaded guilty
to second-degree murder in the high-profile July 7 death of her husband
of eight days, Cody Johnson. She is due to be sentenced next week.
The agreement with
prosecutors, which came just as closing arguments in her federal murder
trial were set to begin, involved the dropping of a first-degree murder
count that could have carried a mandatory life sentence.
Prosecutors
said that Graham deliberately shoved Johnson, 25, off a rock ledge
during a marital dispute while hiking a steep trail at Glacier and then
lied to investigators and tried to cover up the crime.
After
striking the plea deal, Graham admitted her guilt to U.S. District
Judge Donald Molloy, who presided over her trial in Missoula, Montana.
She told the judge that her husband had grabbed her hand during the
argument and that she "just pushed his hand off and just pushed away."
While
a second-degree murder conviction may be punishable by life in prison,
it can also result in a lesser sentence of about 20 years behind bars,
with possible adjustments for accepting responsibility and other
factors.
Federal prosecutors said
in a sentencing recommendation filed on Tuesday that a prison term of
24 to 30 years for the second-degree murder count would be insufficient
for Graham, whom they described as "extremely dangerous, predatory and
an unrepentant murderer."
They
argued that the seriousness of Graham's crime, her lack of remorse and
the chance she might commit another violent crime warranted a life
sentence or no less than 50 years in jail.
"The
defendant, despite offering no remorse, has left a mother childless,
upended a community and shown no respect for the law during this entire
process," wrote Michael Cotter, U.S. Attorney for Montana.
Michael Donahoe,
Graham's federal defender, is seeking a 10-year sentence. He said the
former nanny had no criminal record before the "tragic event," was
unlikely to commit another crime and regretted she had not come forward
sooner with the truth.
"She is
worthy of punishment and the shame that will no doubt accompany her for
the remainder of her life," Donahoe wrote in legal filings. "Defendant
has confided to the undersigned that a day does not go by that she
doesn't think of her husband and what might have been."
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