NAVAJO GIRL SEX ASSAULT AND KILLING;NEW MEXICO MAN PLEADS GUILTY

•BREAKING: Tom Begaye entered his new plea at a hearing in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque as family members of the girl cried.

ALBUQUERQUE, NM — A man charged with abducting, sexually assaulting and murdering an 11-year-old girl on the largest American Indian reservation pleaded guilty Tuesday.

More than a year after Ashlynne Mike was killed in Navajo Nation, Tom Begaye entered his new plea at a hearing in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque as family members of Mike cried. Sentencing will be held at a later date.

Ashlynne's father, Gary Mike, said after the hearing that the case was like a roller coaster ride.

"I'm glad this didn't go to trial," he said. 
Asked if he had a message for Begaye , Mike paused, tried to hold back tears and said, "I can't now."

Begaye lured the girl into his van in May 2016 and sexually assaulted her, prosecutors said. She was reported missing, but an Amber Alert didn't go out in the state until the next day. She was later found dead near the Arizona-New Mexico border. The Navajo Nation covers parts of those two states and Utah.

The death led to pending federal legislation that would expand the Amber Alert system to tribal communities and calls for Navajo Nation to end its opposition to the death penalty.
Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona introduced legislation in April that would expand the notification system. He said more than 7,700 American Indian children are listed as missing in the U.S.

Authorities say Begaye lured Mike and her brother into his van. The boy later told police the man took them deep into the desert then walked off with the girl and a tire iron before returning alone.
Begaye told investigators he sexually assaulted the girl and hit her twice in the head with a crowbar, and that she was still moving when he left her in the desert, according to court documents.
Her brother was able to escape.

Begaye is from the small town of Waterflow near Lower Fruitland, where Mike lived with her father and siblings, according to the FBI. The town is near the reservation.

Navajo Nation, like many Native American tribes, outlaws the death penalty. Federal prosecutors are responsible for prosecuting homicides on tribal lands and rarely challenge tribal beliefs. Gary Mike said changing the tribal rule on the death penalty would be a decision for tribal elders.

After his daughter's death, Gary Mike filed a lawsuit against Navajo Nation for failing to have an emergency notification system that he says could have saved his daughter's life.

An Amber Alert system for the 27,000-square-mile reservation was proposed years ago but never implemented, despite the tribe having been awarded $330,000 in federal funding as part of a U.S. Justice Department pilot project.
Half the money was used to buy equipment such as megaphones and pop-up tents, but the rest went unspent.

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