John Allen Arizona Death Row

john allen arizona death row

John Allen was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a child. John Allen along with his wife Sammantha Allen would put a ten year old child, Ame Deal, in a plastic storage container and shut the lid. The child who had been abused for years would suffocate and die. John Allen and Sammantha Allen were both convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

John Allen 2021 Information

ASPC Eyman, Browning Unit
PO Box 3400
JOHN M. ALLEN 323167
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

John Allen More News

John Allen was given the death sentence today for the 2011 murder of 10-year-old Ame Deal as he and his wife became  the first couple to be sentenced to die in Arizona, according to the state’s Department of Corrections.

In August,  Sammantha Allen became the first woman sent to death row by a Maricopa County jury since 2004.
Eva Dugan is the first and only female executed in Arizona, in 1930, for killing a man she worked for in Pima County. She had been married five times, and all her husbands had reportedly disappeared.

This afternoon, none of the jurors looked at John Allen as they filed into court stone-faced after finishing deliberation for the penalty phase of the trial.  He was convicted of first-degree murder last week.

Then Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Erin O’Brien Otis sentenced Allen to death by lethal injection, adding at least 36 years in prison for child abuse and conspiracy to commit child abuse.
Allen stared at his hands but did not react. One woman gasped and lowered her head.

After a pausing a long minute, Allen addressed the judge.

“I want to say I’m sorry,” he said, breaking down.

“What happened was an accident. I’m an idiot. I’m a jerk. It was an accident. I’m sorry to Ame. I’m sorry to her
family. I’m sorry to my family. I shamed all of them.”

Two women in his family start sobbing. Allen fought through tears throughout and could not get up from the table. He had his head in his hands, sobbing as a circle of bailiffs and attorneys hovered around him. He remained like that for five minutes after the judge left the bench.

“In my entire career, I can’t say I’ve ever seen a worse case,” Judge Otis said after the verdict was read.

“This was one of the most unnecessary deaths of a child I’ve ever seen.”

Family members declined comment. As Allen was led away, they clung to each other in twos and threes, sobbing.

During Allen’s trial and in court documents, the image of a living hell emerged about the house in southwest Phoenix. The evidence showed kids had been treated to routine belt lashings and paddling with the “butt buster,” but that Ame was singled out for worse treatment.

When police asked Sammantha Allen what her driving moral belief was, she said, “Honor thy mother and father.” She had acted out of a misguided sense of family loyalty, her lawyer told that jury.

Stoltzmann and Ame’s grandmother, Judith Deal, had already been sentenced to lengthy prison terms on child-abuse convictions; 24 years and 10 years, respectively. Ame’s father, David Deal, was sentenced to 14 years for attempted child abuse.

The family’s story has been told many times in many courts over six years, but in the end, the ordeal to find justice in 2011 death of “the girl in the box”  ended the way it all began. With responsibility.

Ame’s family thought padlocking her in a footlocker was the best way for her to take responsibility when they said she took food and lied about it. On the day she died, she’d been accused of taking a Popsicle without permission.

Because of such twisted reasoning, five adults who were supposed to care for her have now been convicted of murder, child abuse, or both. John Allen’s trial, like those before, was heart-wrenching and disturbing.

Ame, who weighed just 59 pounds only three weeks before her 11th birthday and measured 48 inches in height, died in a plastic storage tub 31 inches long. It was July 11, 2011, and the tub was put in a room with no air conditioning.

The thermometer never dipped below 95. John and Sammantha Allen, went to bed, planning to check on her. They didn’t. They took responsibility, but disregarded it.

The next morning, Ame’s lips were blue. It took half an hour before somebody in the squalid, overcrowded house near 35th Avenue and Broadway Road, overrun by cockroaches and stinking of urine, called 911. Ame died of suffocation, complicated by heat exhaustion and dehydration, the autopsy later showed. She cooked in the box.

In a videotaped interview with police, John Allen explained that he put Ame in the box, but Sammantha said the girl could get out. So, he says on the tape played for the jury, he went to the backyard, took a padlock off the fence, and locked the footlocker with Ame inside as Sammantha watched.

When police arrived, kids told them one of the younger children in the house, which held as many as 24 people at one time, locked Ame inside the box during a game of hide-and-seek. The younger girl liked to lock things and giggle.

The Allens later repeated this story. John Allen penned his thoughts in his own, clear, handwriting the morning of July 12, 2011, in a spiral notebook that police found. “Ame found passed away in box. They (the kids) were playing hide-and-go-seek. We believe she fell asleep and suffocated,” he wrote.

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/john-allen-gets-death-penalty-for-murder-of-ame-deal-9877226

Sammantha Uriarte Allen Women On Death Row

Sammantha Uriarte Allen Women On Death Row

Sammantha Uriarte Allen is on death row in Arizona along with her husband John Allen. According to court documents Sammantha and John Allen would put a ten year old girl into a plastic tub and closed the lid. The little girl would die from overheating. Apparently the reason for this barbaric punishment is that the little girl took a couple of ice pops without asking. When the forensic pathologist was examining the child he found signs of old injuries and police would uncover a long series of abuses that was inflicted on the child. The two would be convicted of child abuse and murder and sentenced to death

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Sammantha Uriarte Allen 2021 Information

Last Name First Name Middle Initial URIARTE SAMMANTHA E
Gender Height (inches)Weigh tHair Color FEMALE 63 150 BLOND
Eye ColorEthnic Origin Custody Class Admission GREEN CAUCASIAN Close/Moderate 08/07/2017
Projected Eligible Release Date Prison Release DateRelease Type Death SENTENCE EXPIRATION
Most Recent Location As of Date Complex Unit Last Movement Status PERRYVILLEAS PC-PV LUMLEY UNIT 08/25/2021 ACTIVE

Sammantha Uriarte Allen

Sammantha Allen Other News

In the end, the jurors felt they had no choice but to sentence Sammantha Allen to death for the brutal 2011 murder of her 10-year-old cousin, Ame Deal.

Sammantha Uriarte Allen had been on trial in Maricopa County Superior Court since May, one of four family members charged with disciplining the girl by forcing her to do exercise in sweltering July heat and then locking her in a 31-inch-long footlocker overnight.

“The pictures of the victim stayed in our minds,” said juror Ann Ospeth. “I think the thing for us was the victim and all the things her life entailed.”

It demanded a death penalty, the jurors agreed.

“We were following what the law stated,” said juror Amanda Heath.

And indeed the jurors felt that Allen should be punished to the max.

They also found aggravating factors for the four underlying child-abuse counts against Allen, which allowed the judge to impose harsher sentences for those charges.



Superior Court Judge Teresa Sanders sentenced Sammantha to an additional four consecutive sentences totaling 76 years for those crimes. She was given credit for more than 2,000 days she has already spent in custody.

Sammantha was found guilty June 26. Then the jury deliberated for a week over whether there were mitigating factors that would allow Sammantha Allen to avoid the death penalty and instead be sentenced to life in prison.

They considered her age, her dysfunctional upbringing and the fact that she had no prior criminal record. But they determined the horror of the crime outweighed all of those.

Sammantha Uriarte Allen remains on death row

Sammantha Allen More News

A Phoenix woman was sentenced to death Monday in the killing of her 10-year-old cousin who was locked in a small plastic storage box and left to die.

Sammantha Uriarte Allen is one of just dozens of female death-row inmates in the United States.

The jury reached the verdict after Allen, 29, was convicted in June of first-degree murder and four counts of child abuse in the 2011 killing of Ame Deal, who was punished for stealing an ice pop.

Sammantha Uriarte Allen held her head in her hand and wept as the verdict was read and later cried and hugged her attorneys before she was led out of the courtroom.

“Lack of remorse was the biggest thing that played into it for us, that we didn’t see that from Sammantha throughout the whole process,” juror Anne Schaad told CBS affiliate KPHO-TV.

Allen will become the 55th woman condemned to die nationwide. There are only two other women on death row in Arizona, which is among the states struggling to buy execution drugs after pharmaceutical companies began blocking the use of their products in lethal injections.

In comparison, nearly 2,800 men are facing executions in the U.S., according to an April report by the NAACP that’s used by the Death Penalty Information Center.

In Allen’s case, authorities said she and her husband are responsible for making Ame get into the box, where she was left and found dead six or seven hours later.

The girl’s death was the culmination of a history of abuse that a handful of relatives heaped on her, authorities say.

Ame was forced to eat dog feces, crush aluminum cans barefoot, consume hot sauce and get in the storage box on other occasions. She also was kicked in the face, beaten with a wooden paddle and forcibly dunked after being thrown in a cold swimming pool, investigators said.

Adults at the home originally claimed Ame hid during a late-night game of hide-and-seek and wasn’t found until hours later. Three other relatives are in prison serving sentences for abusing Ame.

Allen’s husband, John Allen, 29, is scheduled to go on trial Oct. 9. He’s has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and child abuse and also faces the death penalty.

Sammantha Allen’s mother, Cynthia Stoltzmann, who also was Ame’s legal guardian, is serving a 24-year prison sentence for a child abuse conviction.

Child welfare authorities in Arizona said they didn’t receive any reports of abuse before her death. But child welfare reports from Utah, where the family lived before moving to Phoenix, listed Ame as an abused child, police said.

The verdict comes after executions in Arizona were put on hold following the 2014 death of a prisoner who was given 15 doses of a two-drug combination before he died in what his attorney called a botched execution.

But the state is now able to resume executions after a lawsuit that challenged the way Arizona carries out the death penalty was settled earlier this summer. No executions are scheduled.

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Sammantha Uriarte Allen 2021

Sammantha Uriarte is currently incarcerated at the ASPC Perryville, Lumley Unit the home of Arizona Death Row for Women

Why Is Sammantha Uriarte On Death Row

Sammantha Allen was convcited of the murder of a ten year old girl