The United States has executed its first female federal inmate in nearly seven decades, carrying out the death sentence against Lisa Montgomery in the early hours of Wednesday morning. The 52-year-old was pronounced dead by lethal injection at 1:31 a.m. at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana.

Her execution followed a chaotic legal battle that stretched through the night. Two separate stays, granted over concerns about her severe mental competency, were lifted within hours by higher courts. The Supreme Court cleared the final hurdle just after midnight.
Montgomery was convicted of the 2004 murder of 23-year-old Bobby Jo Stinnett in Skidmore, Missouri. She strangled the pregnant woman and performed a crude cesarean with a kitchen knife, then kidnapped the newborn child.
For 16 years, Montgomery occupied a solitary cell on federal death row, the only woman among male inmates. Her final day was marked by silence and vacant stares, according to witnesses. She was flown from Texas to Indiana under heavy guard on Monday.
In her final hours, she was offered a last meal. She requested a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and a Diet Coke, a simple meal she did not finish. She had largely stopped eating in her final days.
When asked by the warden if she had any last words, Montgomery whispered a single, quiet “No.” She was strapped to the gurney, her glasses remaining on. Her spiritual advisor was denied entry at the last moment.
As the lethal injection began, her fingers tapped rhythmically against the restraint. She let out one faint gasp before being pronounced dead. A small heart-shaped tattoo on her hand was visible to witnesses.
The execution concludes one of the most disturbing capital cases in modern history, a crime that horrified a nation. It also reignites fierce debate over the execution of the severely mentally ill.
Montgomery’s defense team argued until the end that she was a “broken, delusional, and psychotic” woman, unfit for execution under constitutional law. They detailed a lifetime of grotesque sexual torture and abuse beginning in childhood.
Psychologists diagnosed her with bipolar disorder, complex PTSD, and brain damage. They argued these conditions, and a rare condition called pseudocyesis, fueled the delusional pregnancy that led to the crime.
Prosecutors successfully argued at her 2007 trial that the murder was premeditated and calculated. They highlighted how she researched cesareans online, used a fake identity to lure Stinnett, and brought a knife and rope to the scene.
The jury rejected the mental health defense and sentenced her to death. For years, her execution seemed unlikely as federal executions were paused. That changed under the Trump administration’s resumed use of the death penalty.

Her date was initially set for December 2020, but was delayed after her attorneys contracted COVID-19. The final execution date was set for January 12th, triggering a frantic, last-ditch legal effort focused on her deteriorating psyche.
“She has long been a woman in desperate need of mental health care, not an execution,” one of her attorneys, Kelley Henry, stated. These pleas were ultimately rejected by the courts as the machinery of execution advanced.
Outside the prison walls, a small group of protesters held a silent candlelight vigil. The scene was a stark contrast to the sterile, procedural environment inside where Montgomery spent her final moments.
The victim’s family has long awaited this outcome. Bobby Jo Stinnett is remembered as a kind, animal-loving woman excited for motherhood. Her daughter, Victoria Jo, now 16, survived the attack and was raised by her father.
The execution of Lisa Montgomery marks a somber and historic moment for the federal prison system. It is the first time since 1953 that the U.S. government has carried out a death sentence against a woman.

Human rights organizations and mental health advocates have condemned the action. They argue it sets a dangerous precedent for executing individuals with severe psychiatric illnesses and documented brain damage.
The Justice Department has not commented beyond confirming the execution was carried out in accordance with the court’s order. Officials stated all protocols were followed precisely.
With this execution, the federal government has now executed 13 inmates since resuming the practice in July 2020. Montgomery’s case was unique not only for her gender but for the profound psychological complexities it presented.
Her story forces a grim examination of trauma, mental illness, and ultimate accountability. It raises unresolved questions about where justice ends and where mercy, for a profoundly damaged life, might begin.
The final image for many will be that of a quiet, mentally shattered woman in a windowless cell, tapping her fingers softly under blinding lights, awaiting a punishment she could scarcely comprehend. The nation’s long debate over capital punishment continues.