Alyssa Bustamante Parole Hearing July 8 2024

Alyssa Bustamante
Alyssa Bustamante

Alyssa Bustamante is a teen killer who would be convicted of the murder of nine year old Elizabeth Olson in 2009

According to court documents Alyssa Bustamante would lure Elizabeth Olson into the woods in St. Martins Missouri where she would stab the little girl to death before burying her body in a shallow grave. Bustamante was fifteen years old at the time of the murder

Alyssa Bustamante would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison. However the laws surround sentencing juveniles to life in prison would change since she has been incarcerated and now the teen killer is eligible for parole after serving fifteen years in prison

On Monday, July 8 2024, Alyssa Bustamante will go in front of the Missouri parole board and beg to be released. Due to the nature of the murder and Elizabeth Olson family strongly opposing her release chances are Bustamante will stay just where she is. Unfortunately for the Olson family they are going to have to keep facing this teen killer at every foreseeable parole date

Alyssa Bustamante Parole News

A Cole County woman who killed a 9-year-old when she was a teenager will get a chance at a release from prison on Monday.

The Missouri Parole Board at a hearing will consider releasing Alyssa Bustamante from prison or continuing the life sentence she received when she was a teenager. She is serving the sentence at Chillicothe Correctional Center in northern Missouri.

Bustamante pleaded guilty in 2012 to a reduced charge of second-degree murder and armed criminal action for killing 9-year-old Elizabeth Olten in 2009. Investigators say Bustamante wrote that stabbing Olten excited her. Searchers found Olten’s body buried in a shallow grave in St. Martins, where the two lived.

The plea deal at the time would have made Bustamante eligible for parole in 2044, but state lawmakers in 2021 made some juvenile offenders eligible for parole after serving 15 years in prison for any sentence lasting 15 years or longer. Only juvenile offenders in prison for first-degree murder do not receive the earlier parole eligibility. One of the sponsors of the legislation told ABC 17 News in 2021 that the changes were not made to help cases like Bustamante’s.

The six-person board will hold the hearing to decide whether Bustamante is eligible for release. The board’s website says that the panel discusses and reviews how she has fared in prison, her conduct and programs completed while there and “any other issues the Board thinks is relevant.” Victims and their families can attend the hearing and give a statement.

Olten’s mother, Patty Preiss, told ABC 17 News in a written statement that she and her husband would attend the parole hearing to “beg the parole board not to vote to let her out.” Preiss said she received an automated message from the state about the parole date setting on Mother’s Day.

“I will relive my pain for them if it means it could make any difference at all,” Preiss said. “There is very little I can do for my daughter now but show up.”

Lawmakers have tried to exclude juvenile offenders convicted of second-degree murder, like Bustamante, from receiving the earlier parole eligibility. The chambers passed the measure in SB 754 this year, which Gov. Mike Parson has not yet acted upon. Preiss said she hoped the governor might still act on the bill before the hearing, which she said would nullify Bustamante’s eligibility.

“I still hope maybe the governor can find time to sign the bill before Monday,” Preiss wrote. “After all, this was a bill that they told me they wanted to call ‘Elizabeth’s Law.'”

Anji Gandhi, Cole County’s current senior assistant prosecuting attorney, worked on the Bustamante case as it proceeded to the eventual plea. She said the family believed when the plea was worked out that Bustamante would not be eligible for parole for decades.

“It is frustrating that the family will have to face Alyssa Bustamante on Monday and re-open the gruesome facts of this case simply because the bill wasn’t signed in time to make the hearing a nullity,” Gandhi said.

The panel takes “approximately 8-12 weeks” to make a decision on parole eligibility. The panel may decide to grant an early release at a future date or be rescheduled for another hearing in one to five years.

Alyssa Bustamante Parole Denied

The Missouri Board of Parole denied convicted Cole County killer Alyssa Bustamante an early release from prison.

Department of Corrections spokeswoman Karen Pojmann told ABC 17 News that Bustamante’s next hearing is expected to take place in 2029. Some advocates for keeping Bustamante in prison longer say a new state law should push that parole eligibility even further back.

Bustamante became eligible for an early release from her second-degree murder conviction when state lawmakers changed the rules for people convicted of crimes when they were teenagers. Bustamante pleaded guilty in 2012 to killing 9-year-old Elizabeth Olten in St. Martins. Bustamante was 15 years old when she killed Olten in 2009. The board held the parole hearing on July 8.

Olten’s stepfather, Gary Bemboom, was notified of the parole board’s decision last week

Bemboom said he’s hopeful Bustamante’s parole schedule will return to what it was before the 2021 change state lawmakers made for juvenile offenders. Senate Bill 754, signed on July 9 by Gov. Mike Parson, precludes those convicted of first- and second-degree murder from receiving parole eligibility after serving 15 years of their sentence. That would make Bustamante eligible for parole in 2044.

Bemboom said the parole hearing was “another day of grieving” for the family.

“All of the hurt and pain was thrown back in the family’s face,” Bemboom said in an email. “Bustamante described how and why she killed Elizabeth with details that weren’t allowed at her trial. It was a devastating day for all that were there.”

Cole County prosecutor Locke Thompson told ABC 17 News in a text message that he was glad to learn that the parole board denied her an early release. He said SB 754 may nullify the 2029 parole hearing when the law takes effect Aug. 28.

“I hope that the implementation of Senate Bill 754 next month pushes [any] future parole hearing far beyond 2029,” Thompson said.

Bustamante, now 30 years old, has been in custody since 2009.

Alyssa Bustamante

Alyssa Bustamante 2

Alyssa Bustamante was fifteen years old when she murdered nine year old Elizabeth Olten. This teen killer who planned to kill more people would be arrested and sentenced to life in prison

Make Sure To Check Out Alyssa Bustamante Main Page

Alyssa Bustamante – Teen Thrill Killer Alyssa Bustamante Could Get Paroled Some Day

A teenager who slit her young neighbor’s throat and called it “enjoyable” may have the opportunity to walk free one day.

Alyssa Bustamante, 18, was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole in a Missouri courtroom today.

The teen expressed remorse for brutally killing her neighbor, Elizabeth Olten, in October 2009, in what prosecutors described as a thrill killing.

“I know words can never be enough and they can never adequately describe how horribly I feel for all of this,” Bustamante said to Olten’s mother and siblings, who sat silently. “If I could give my life to get her back I would. I’m sorry.”

Bustamante stabbed the 9-year-old girl in the chest, strangled her, sliced her throat and left her in a shallow grave covered with leaves so she could find out what it felt like to kill.

“I just f***ing killed someone. I strangled them and slit their throat and stabbed them now they’re dead. I don’t know how to feel atm [at the moment],” Bustamante wrote in her diary.

She later added: “It was ahmazing. As soon as you get over the ‘ohmygawd I can’t do this’ feeling, it’s pretty enjoyable. I’m kinda nervous and shaky though right now. Kay, I gotta go to church now…lol.”

Elizabeth’s mother, Patty Preiss called Bustamante “an evil monster” and said that she “hated her” on the first day of the teen’s sentencing hearing.

Prosecutor Mark Richardson had argued for life in prison, plus 71 years, accounting for the years Elizabeth lost.

“These sentences are appropriate and fit what happened to Elizabeth at the hands of a truly evil individual who strangled and stabbed an innocent child simply for the thrill of it,” Richardson said in a statement.

The defense cited Bustamante’s depression and a suicide attempt as a reason for a reduced sentence.

On the teen’s YouTube page, a video appears to show the suspect with her brothers purposefully shocking themselves on an electrified fence. She listed “killing people” as one of her hobbies under her profile.

Her Twitter messages around the time of the murder spoke of “addiction” and “terrors.”

One message said, “all I want in life is a reason for all this pain.”

“She committed the murder after deliberation, which means cool deliberation or cool reflection on the matter for any length of time,” Cole County prosecutor Mark Richardson told the court Wednesday.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/thrill-killer-alyssa-bustamante-parole-day/story?id=15538798

Alyssa Bustamante – Bustamante appeals life sentence for killing 9-year-old neighbor girl

Convicted child killer Alyssa Bustamante just turned 20 years old Jan. 28 and is now nearly four years into a life sentence with the possibility of parole. She is appealing her sentence.

Bustamante was sentenced in 2012 for what prosecutors called the thrill kill of a 9-year-old neighbor girl, Elizabeth Olten in October 2009.
She testified in Cole Co. Court today that when she accepted the plea agreement, she did not fully understand the current state of the law on sentencing juveniles as an adult, and would have possibly put her fate in the hands of a jury instead.

“The threat of (life without parole) as a mandatory sentence was allowed to intimidate Alyssa into accepting a guilty plea she would not have otherwise accepted,” Attorney Gary Brotherton wrote in documents filed with the Cole County Circuit Court claiming Bustamante had ineffective counsel at the time she pleaded guilty.

Brotherton told the court that two cases could have had an effect on Bustamante’s options.

Miller v. Alabama was decided in 2012 — after Bustamante was sentenced — in which the United States Supreme Court held that mandatory sentences of life without the possibility of parole are unconstitutional for juvenile offenders. A previous case in 2010, Graham v. Florida, ruled that life without parole sentences for juvenile offenders is unconstitutional, barring murder.

Bustamante was charged as an adult with first-degree murder, which carries a mandatory sentence of life without the possibility of parole. She accepted an agreement with the prosecution that she would plead guilty to a reduced charge of murder in the second degree and armed criminal action. She was sentenced to 30 years with the possibility of parole for the murder charge, and 30 years for using a knife to kill her victim, which is ordered to run at the conclusion of her life sentence.

Brotherton asked Bustamante on the stand if she had spoken with her attorneys about legal issues.

“Yes,” she answered, “but I didn’t really understand legal issues.”

“At that time you had barely started the 10th grade?” he asked.

“Yes.”

Bustamante’s state-appointed attorneys, Don Catlett and Charles Moreland, had each testified that she had accepted the plea agreement less than an hour after it was offered. She told the court she felt pressured to make a decision, and that she just wanted to get it over with.
“I didn’t really, couldn’t wrap my mind around it,” she said. “It was just … hopelessness.”
She confirmed that she was being treated with medication for depression and anxiety at the time, and said while being held by the county, she slept a lot and continued cutting herself.

Judge Pat Joyce has given Brotherton 30 days to send her proposed orders. She’ll make a decision after that whether to declare Bustamante’s counsel was ineffective and order a new trial or let the current sentence stand.

Olten’s mother, Patty Preiss, was in the courtroom but declined to comment. Also present was Bustamante’s grandmother, Karen Brooke, who had custody of Alyssa when Olten was killed.

Bustamante admitted prior to her sentencing that she killed Olten by strangling her and slashing her throat. She then buried her in a shallow grave in a heavily wooded area near the girls’ homes. She had written in her diary that the experience was “ahmazing,” and later told investigators she had done it because she wanted to see what it was like to kill someone

https://www.missourinet.com/2014/01/30/bustamante-appeals-life-sentence-for-killing-9-year-old-neighbor-girl-audio/

Alyssa Bustamante – Alyssa Bustamante will remain in prison

 A Missouri woman sentenced to life in prison when she was a juvenile for slaying a nine year-old girl will remain in prison.

Judge Patricia Joyce has denied Alyssa Bustamante’s motion to set aside and correct a judgement for a plea deal Bustamante accepted in 2012.

Bustamante was facing a first-degree murder charge for killing nine year-old Elizabeth Olten, but she plead guilty to second-degree murder in January 2012 and was sentenced to life with the chance of parole.

Bustamante testified in January that she wouldn’t have plead guilty if she had known about a pending U.S. Supreme Court case involving juvenile murder defendants.

After Bustamante was sentenced, the Supreme Court ruled that mandatory life prison sentences for juveniles were unconstitutional.

It remains unclear if Bustamante intends to appeal Judge Joyce’s ruling.

https://krcgtv.com/news/local/alyssa-bustamante-will-remain-in-prison

Alyssa Bustamante – efferson City woman reaches $5M settlement with inmate in killing of 9-year-old daughter

A Missouri woman whose 9-year-old daughter was killed by a teenage neighbor in 2009 has agreed to settle a wrongful death lawsuit that requires the imprisoned killer to pay her more than $5 million.

Patricia Preiss signed a deal Monday to settle the lawsuit she filed against Alyssa Bustamante, who was 15 when she killed Preiss’ daughter, Elizabeth. Prosecutors alleged Bustamante committed the crime to see how it felt to kill someone.

Bustamante, who is now 23, confessed to the killing. She was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.

It’s unclear if Bustamante has the means to pay the settlement. Attorneys for her and Priess did not immediately return phone calls seeking details Tuesday from The Associated Press.

Bustamante signed the settlement agreement in March, but documents show Preiss didn’t agree to the deal until Monday, The Jefferson City News-Tribune reported. A trial was scheduled to begin on Aug. 7. Bustamante is serving her sentence at the Women’s Eastern Missouri Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Vandalia.

Bustamante pleaded guilty in 2012 to luring Elizabeth to the woods in the small town of St. Martins, just west of Jefferson City. She slit the girl’s throat and strangled her before burying her in a grave she had dug several days in advance, according to investigators.

Under the lawsuit settlement, Preiss agreed to dismiss any remaining counts. Bustamante also is required to notify Preiss if she receives any compensation arising from publicity about the case.

https://fox4kc.com/news/jefferson-city-woman-reaches-5m-settlement-with-inmate-in-killing-of-9-year-old-daughter/

Alyssa Bustamante Videos

Alyssa Bustamante Teen Killer Murders 9 Year Old Girl

Alyssa Bustamante

Alyssa Bustamante was fifteen years old when she lured a nine year old girl into the woods and killed her. According to Bustamante she wanted to see what it felt like to murder someone. This teen killer who had planned on killing two other children and had already predug two graves would be convicted and sentenced to life in prison

Alyssa Bustamante 2023 Information

Alyssa Bustamante 2022
Assigned LocationWomen’s Eastern REC/Diag/Corr Center
Address1101 E. Highway 54, Vandalia, MO 63382
Assigned Officer 
Sentence SummaryLife (Life + 30 CS)
Active OffensesMURDER 2ND DEGREE; ARMED CRIMINAL ACTION
Completed OffensesCompleted sentence not found
AliasesAlyssa Dailene Kemp; Alyssa Dailene Bustamante; Alyssa Daileen Bustamante; Alyssa D Bustamante

Alyssa Bustamante Other News

Missouri teenager Alyssa Bustamante has been sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole in the killing of a 9-year-old girl. The 18-year-old was sentenced Wednesday in Cole Country Circuit Court. She pleaded guilty in January to second-degree murder and armed criminal action in the October 2009 stabbing and strangling of her neighbor, Elizabeth Olten.

Bustamante’s defense attorneys said in court that an abundance of the drug Prozac could have been a catalyst to her behavior. A consulting psychiatrist testified Monday afternoon that Bustamante’s prescription for Prozac may have helped lead her to kill.

Alyssa Bustamante More News

A Missouri woman whose 9-year-old daughter was killed by a teenage neighbor in 2009 has agreed to settle a wrongful death lawsuit that requires the imprisoned killer to pay her more than $5 million.

Patricia Preiss signed a deal Monday to settle the lawsuit she filed against Bustamante, who was 15 when she killed Preiss’ daughter, Elizabeth. Prosecutors alleged Bustamante committed the crime to see how it felt to kill someone.

Bustamante, who is now 23, confessed to the killing. She was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.

It’s unclear if Bustamante has the means to pay the settlement. Attorneys for her and Priess did not immediately return phone calls seeking details Tuesday from The Associated Press.

Bustamante signed the settlement agreement in March, but documents show Preiss didn’t agree to the deal until Monday, The Jefferson City News-Tribune reported. A trial was scheduled to begin on Aug. 7. Bustamante is serving her sentence at the Women’s Eastern Missouri Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Vandalia.

Bustamante pleaded guilty in 2012 to luring Elizabeth to the woods in the small town of St. Martins, just west of Jefferson City. She slit the girl’s throat and strangled her before burying her in a grave she had dug several days in advance, according to investigators.

Under the lawsuit settlement, Preiss agreed to dismiss any remaining counts. Bustamante also is required to notify Preiss if she receives any compensation arising from publicity about the case.

Jefferson City woman reaches $5M settlement with inmate in killing of 9-year-old daughter

Alyssa Bustamante FAQ

Alyssa Bustamante Now

Alyssa Bustamante is currently incarcerated at the Woman’s Eastern Receiving and Diagnostic Center

Alyssa Bustamante Release Date

Alyssa Bustamante is serving life plus thirty years

Alyssa Bustamante Photos

Alyssa Bustamante
Alyssa Bustamante
Alyssa Bustamante

Alyssa Bustamante More News

On October 21, 2009, fifteen-year-old Alyssa Bustamante strangled and stabbed nine-year-old Elizabeth Olten to death and then buried her body in a shallow grave.   Upon questioning by law enforcement officers, Bustamante admitted that she had killed the child, and she led the officers to the grave.1

In November 2009, the Cole County Juvenile Officer filed a petition asking the juvenile court to relinquish its jurisdiction over Alyssa Bustamante to allow the State to prosecute her as an adult in circuit court.   The juvenile court held a “certification” hearing (at which Bustamante was represented by counsel) and ultimately granted the Juvenile Officer’s petition.   The State then charged Bustamante as an adult with first-degree murder and armed criminal action.   Attorneys Donald Catlett and Charles Moreland from the Capital Division of the Public Defender’s Office entered an appearance on Bustamante’s behalf.   The matter was set for trial on January 26, 2012.

On January 10, 2012, Alyssa Bustamante appeared before the circuit court, accompanied by her attorneys, to plead guilty to second-degree murder and armed criminal action, pursuant to an agreement with the State.   Plea counsel informed the court that he and co-counsel had reviewed the substitute information with Bustamante and that she was “prepared today to take responsibility for these offenses.”   Alyssa Bustamante confirmed that she wanted to withdraw her not-guilty plea and to plead guilty to the charges in the substitute information.

The court informed Alyssa Bustamante of the range of punishment for the offenses and explained that there would be a sentencing hearing at which evidence would be taken and the court would then decide what the sentence would be.   Bustamante acknowledged that she understood that she was entering a “blind plea,” meaning that the judge was not bound by any agreed upon sentence, and that she could not withdraw her guilty plea after the plea hearing.   The circuit court accepted Bustamante’s guilty plea after finding that she had entered the plea “knowingly, willingly, voluntarily, and intelligently,” with a full understanding of the charges and the consequences of the plea, and that a factual basis had been established for the plea.

At the sentencing hearing, numerous witnesses, including several expert witnesses, testified for both sides.   The circuit court heard evidence about Bustamante’s history of mental health issues and about the circumstances surrounding the murder.   On February 8, 2012, the court sentenced Bustamante to consecutive terms of life for the murder and thirty years for ACA.

Alyssa Bustamante Videos

Alyssa Bustamante Interrogation