Life sentence sought for Glacier newlywed killer
Federal prosecutors recommended a life sentence for a 22-year old Kalispell newlywed who pleaded guilty to murder for pushing her new husband off a cliff in Glacier National Park.
Jordan Graham’s attorney, however, said the “extremely reckless but unintentional act” merits 10 years in prison.
A sentencing hearing for Graham is March 27 before U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula. Graham entered her plea in December to second-degree murder in the July death of Cody Johnson, 25, her husband of eight days.
Johnson’s body was found at the bottom of the cliff near The Loop three days after he was reported missing by a friend and co-worker. Graham said at her trial that she was having second thoughts about being married so young, and they went to the park to talk about it.
They argued heatedly at the edge of a steep cliff. Johnson grabbed her, she became angry and she “just pushed” without thinking about where they were, Graham said then.
She didn’t tell anybody what had happened, instead making up a story that Johnson had gone for a joyride with friends from Washington state.
That story unraveled when the versions she told to friends, relatives and authorities didn’t match.
In court filings Tuesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Zeno Baucus asked Molloy to impose a life sentence or else no less than 50 years in prison.
Graham showed no remorse, left Johnson’s mother without a child, upended a community and had no respect for the law in the process, Baucus argued.
“Through her actions, including the murder of Cody and conduct that followed, the defendant has demonstrated that she is extremely dangerous, predatory and an unrepentant murderer,” he wrote.