Does Juvenile Murderer Ethan Windom Deserve Life Without Parole?
By Cully Stimson
On November 9th, the U.S. Supreme
Court will hear oral arguments challenging the constitutionality of juvenile
life without parole (JLWOP) sentences. In preparation for oral arguments, JLWOP:
Faces & Cases will be an on-going series on The Foundry that will tell real
stories about juvenile offenders who are currently serving LWOP
sentences.
Defendant: Ethan Allen
Windom (17)
Victim: Judith Windom
Crime:
Second degree murder
Where: Boise, Idaho
Crime
date: January 25, 2007
Verdict:
Guilty
Sentence: Life without parole
Summary
Ethan Allan Windom battered his mother with a barbell and then killed her
with a kitchen knife.
Facts
Ethan Allan Windom lived with his mother, Judith Windom, in Boise, Idaho.
Judith was a high school teacher and worked with disabled students. Ethan
attended the local public high school, where he received good
grades.
Windom was an avid weight lifter and took creatine, a supplement, to enhance
his weight-lifting ability. At the time he murdered his mother, he was 5’8”
tall, weighed 220 pounds, and was very muscular.
Windom bullied his mother. He took her master bedroom for himself and turned
the living room into a weight-lifting and exercise room, leaving a cramped
bedroom for his mother.
Windom became obsessed with a fictional character from the book and movie “American Psycho.” The character wore a suit and lived a “clean” life by day but committed crimes at night. In time, Windom began to wear a suit to school.
On the night of, January 25, 2007, while his mother was asleep, Windom armed
himself with a barbell and savagely beat her, striking her head repeatedly. Then
he then stabbed her with a kitchen knife until she was dead.
Windom replaced the voicemail greeting on their home telephone with one
explaining that he and his mother were away on a trip. He then walked across
town to his father’s residence. It was the middle of the night. He woke his
father and step mother, telling them that someone had hurt his mother. They
called the police.
After Windom was arrested, he explained that he had been thinking about
killing someone for some time.
Although charged with first degree murder, Windom struck a plea agreement and
pled guilty to second degree murder. He was sentenced to life without the
possibility of parole.
Charles D. Stimson is Senior Legal Fellow and Andrew M. Grossman is
Senior Legal Policy Analyst in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The
Heritage Foundation.

You take a life, you lose yours? I have been fence sitting on the death penalty issue for years. At first being for it, then against it, now, I am not sure it should be completely eliminated. Certainly there are worse things we could, as a society, be more concerned with eliminating.
Why support this supposed "kid" for as many as ten years, in a place where he will learn nothing good, embitter him, then release him to a society who doesn't understand him and in all likelihood, never will?
I sure hope that next victim who walks around today can somehow escape from the consequences of having allowed him the opportunity to one day kill gain.
It's hard to believe this happened so long ago, now.
I went to school and was good friends with Ethan from the 7th grade to the beginning of 10th till i was transferred to another school.
He was so smart and funny. I clearly remember him having long, curly hair, in the 8th grade, he let students and teachers butcher his hair for a dollar a piece to donate to locks of love. This is how I will remember Ethan...
We were in classes together, we were in many projects, I have videos of us from school...
We hadn't talked for quite some time after i left Borah, but when I heard what happened, my heart dropped...I felt horrible.
Ethan, I know you will never read this, but i would love to write you someday, I would love for you to talk to me about everything.
As much anger as i have for you, i feel very sad, too...
Instead of "Does Juvenile Murderer Ethan Windom Deserve Life Without Parole?", let's ask this question - does society deserve to have to deal with this person someday being set free in its midst?
http://www.legislature.idaho.gov/idstat/Title18/T18CH40SECT18-4004.htm
A "life" sentence is more a word than anything else. He'll likely be out in less than 10 years, which is basically one big joke on society . I don't know what the answer is, but it's pretty obvious the system is broken. Everything about this case seems to point to a person that will kill again. Somewhere along the line the potential for repeat offenses should play a larger roll in sentencing and actual time served than it seems to under the current system.
He's gonna make someone a real nice girlfriend in prison . Sure hate it for the little scumbag...er I mean, the poor fella. [/sarcasm]