Ralph Menzies Passes Away on Utah's Death Row

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Burstein, Laura S.

unread,
Nov 26, 2025, 6:16:44 PM11/26/25
to deathpen...@googlegroups.com


https://www.sltrib.com/news/2025/11/26/utah-death-row-inmate-ralph/

 

Once days away from a firing squad execution, Utah death row inmate Ralph Menzies has died of natural causes

Menzies, who was 67, died at a hospital early Wednesday afternoon.

 

By  Jessica Schreifels

Nov. 26, 2025, 5:35 p.m.

 

Ralph LeRoy Menzies, who spent more than 37 years on Utah’s death row for kidnapping and killing a young mother in 1986, died on Wednesday at an area hospital, prison officials announced. He was 67.

 

Menzies — who was once just days away from a violent death by firing squad — died of presumed natural causes, prison officials said. He had vascular dementia, and his health had declined in recent years to the point where his defense team questioned whether Utah officials could legally execute him.

 

“Ralph Menzies was deeply loved by his family, friends, legal team, and by everyone who knew him well,” his lawyers said in a statement Wednesday. “In his later years, he devoted himself to helping others in every way he could. We’re grateful that Ralph passed naturally and maintained his spiritedness and dignity until the end.”

freestarHe was expected to be in court in early December for a competency hearing, where court records indicate that at least one state evaluator had determined he was not competent and could not be legally executed.

 

In 1986, Menzies kidnapped 26-year-old Maurine Hunsaker while she was working at a Kearns gas station. He held her hostage in the Storm Mountain area of Big Cottonwood Canyon overnight, before strangling her and cutting her throat. Two days after he kidnapped her, a hiker found Hunsaker’s body.

 

His death row case dragged on for decades — which frustrated Hunsaker’s family, who felt his execution would bring them closure. As Menzies’ appeals ran out and he got closer to an execution date in recent years, his attorneys argued that his dementia had progressed to the point where he could no longer understand what’s happening — and they argued that meant it would be unconstitutional to execute him. (Utah’s and the United States’ constitutions prohibit the government from executing someone if they don’t understand that they are being executed and the reasons why.)

 

Just a week before he was scheduled to die by firing squad in August, the Utah Supreme Court called off the execution and ruled that more evaluation was needed to determine if Menzies was competent and could legally be executed. That evaluation process had been underway when he died of natural causes.

 

Menzies had a lengthy criminal history prior to killing Hunsaker, which a clinical psychologist concluded during a 1988 court hearing stemmed in part from an extremely abusive childhood. Menzies’ sister testified at that hearing that she and her brother were emotionally and physically abused as children by a succession of brutal stepfathers, including one who she said raped their mother in front of them. That stepfather beat Menzies and his sister and forced them to live in a bunk bed for nearly two years, according to other witnesses who testified.

 

Menzies’ criminal behavior started when he was 7 years old, according to the sentencing judge’s findings. The death row inmate’s attorneys noted in a more recent filing that Menzies had been diagnosed with having brain damage during a stay at a Nevada juvenile lock-up when he was younger.

 

Prior to Hunsaker’s murder, Menzies had been convicted of aggravated robbery, kidnapping, aggravated assault and escape in other cases. He was 28 years old and on parole for robbery and awaiting sentencing on theft convictions when he kidnapped Hunsaker.

freestar

Menzies had chosen to die by firing squad, a decision he made shortly after a judge in 1988 announced that he was sentencing Menzies to death.

Utah last executed an inmate in 2024, when Taberon Honie died by lethal injection. It hasn’t used a firing squad since 2010, when Ronnie Lee Gardner was killed. With Menzies’ death, there are now three men on Utah’s death row. (Two other former death row inmates had their sentences overturned and are awaiting new trials.)

 

###



Over 40 Offices across 4 Continents

This message is confidential and may be legally privileged or otherwise protected from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, please telephone or email the sender and delete this message and any attachment from your system; you must not copy or disclose the contents of this message or any attachment to any other person.

For information about how Squire Patton Boggs processes personal data that is subject to the requirements of applicable data protection laws, please see the relevant Privacy Notice regarding the processing of personal data about clients and other business contacts at www.squirepattonboggs.com.

Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP is part of the international legal practice Squire Patton Boggs, which operates worldwide through a number of separate legal entities. Please visit www.squirepattonboggs.com for more information.

#US
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages