Christa Gail Pike’s name has long been synonymous with one of Tennessee’s most brutal murders. At 18, she helped lure and slaughter 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer in an attack so vicious it stunned even seasoned investigators. A jury quickly sentenced her to death, and for nearly three decades she has waited, aging from volatile teen to middle‑aged woman inside a concrete cell, while appeals painted a portrait of a childhood ravaged by abuse, neglect, and untreated mental illness.
Now, with an execution date set for September 30, 2026, the focus has shifted from what Pike did to what the state may do to her. Attorney Stephen Ferrell warns that her small, fragile veins and a blood disorder could turn a lethal injection into a prolonged, bloody ordeal—more drowning than dying. Citing a recent botched execution attempt on another inmate, he is urging Tennessee to halt or reconsider, arguing that even in the shadow of a monstrous crime, the Constitution does not permit a torturous death.















