In 1995, Christa Pike was an angry, damaged 18-year-old who transformed jealousy into something almost ritualistic. Colleen Slemmer was lured into the woods, beaten, stabbed, and mutilated in a killing so vicious it stunned even hardened investigators. Pike returned to the taped-off crime scene giggling, asking questions, seemingly thrilled by the horror she’d created. A year later, a jury sent her to death row, while her mother wept and blamed herself for the chaos that shaped her daughter’s life.
Three decades on, Pike sits in near-solitary confinement, insisting she is no longer the monster she was at 18. Her lawyers point to childhood abuse, mental illness, and evolving standards that likely would spare her life today. But for Colleen’s family, mercy feels like betrayal. As September 30, 2026 approaches, Tennessee must answer a brutal question: does killing Christa Pike bring justice—or only another irrevocable loss?