Pamela Casey: It’s time for Alabama to open its eyes

(Bibb County Sheriff's Office)

The people of Alabama must confront an undeniable truth: the horrific events in Bibb County are not an anomaly. This isn’t a 100-year flood. Child sexual abuse is a persistent crisis that is affecting every county in our state.

On December 4, 2024—before I ever announced my candidacy for Attorney General—I sent Representative Matt Simpson a text. It read: “Matt, this is Pamela Casey. Can you call me?” He did. We discussed HB49, which he had pre-filed for the 2025 legislative session.

I voiced my full support and urged him to consider adding Sexual Torture of a Child Under the Age of 7 to the list of capital offenses. It was personal to me.

That same day, we were set for sentencing in a case where a jury had convicted a man just weeks earlier of Sexual Torture of a Child Under Seven. She was three years old when it happened.

The defendant was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. That day marked the culmination of a grueling year in the Blount County courtroom. My spirit was tired. Just weeks  earlier, I told my husband that my body felt like it had been beaten—from the emotional toll of preparing young victims to walk into a courtroom and face their abuser at trial. The weight of  what we had seen and prosecuted in 2024 was crushing: 

February: Raymond Scott Putman had two victims and was tried to a jury. He was  convicted of all charges, including: 

  • 8 counts of Sexual Abuse by Forcible Compulsion 
  • 1 count of Sodomy 2nd Degree (against one child, beginning at age 12) o 5 counts of Sexual Abuse of a Child Under 12 
  • 1 count of Rape 1st Degree 
  • 2 counts of Sodomy 1st Degree 
  • 2 counts of Sodomy 2nd Degree 
  • 2 counts of Unlawful Distribution of Material Harmful to a Minor 

March: Ralph Burg pled guilty to Sodomy 1st Degree just before trial.

August: We investigated the kidnapping of a 10-year-old girl in Blountsville. She was recovered from the home of Johnny Chandler, who was charged with Human Trafficking,  Kidnapping 1st Degree, Rape 1st Degree, and Sexual Abuse of a Child Under 12.

September: Leonel Lopez pled guilty to two counts of Rape 1st Degree of a child by  forcible compulsion under the age of 16 and Incest. 

October: Dustin Lamar Peoples was convicted after a jury trial of Sexual Abuse of a  Child Under 12 and Sodomy 1st Degree. 

November: Jeffery Allan Gable was convicted after a jury trial of Sexual Torture of a  Child Under 7 and Sexual Abuse of a Child Under 12.

This list doesn’t even reflect all the other cases charged or investigated in 2024 or those still  pending from prior years. 

These aren’t just files. These are children. They have names. They are innocent lives shattered in ways that most people cannot begin to comprehend. And it’s not just happening in Blount or Bibb County. 

No child should ever have to describe what a grown man did to them—not to a stranger, not in a  courtroom, and certainly not to a jury of twelve people they’ve never met. But that is exactly what we ask them to do. We ask them to relive their trauma, under oath, with their abuser sitting  just feet away. It is one of the most heartbreaking and courageous acts I’ve witnessed in nearly  two decades as a prosecutor. 

No child should have to carry that burden—but many do. And they deserve a justice system that  honors their strength and protects others from suffering the same fate. 

And these are just the cases we were able to prosecute. For every child who makes it into the courtroom, there are many more suffering in silence—waiting to be believed, waiting to be  protected, waiting for justice. 

We cannot legislate evil out of the hearts of predators—but we can create laws that reflect the severity of their crimes. We can support legislation that gives District Attorneys the tools to seek the strongest possible punishment. And we can ensure that Alabama is not a place where abusers  feel protected. 

Representative Matt Simpson’s bill is a start. Expanding the death penalty to include Rape, Sodomy, and Sexual Torture of a Child Under 7 is necessary. But legislation alone is not enough. We must fund resources for victims. We must train investigators and prosecutors. We must speak  boldly—and act swiftly. 

If we won’t stand up for the most vulnerable among us—who will? 

Let us not forget: Had HB49 been passed in 2025, some of the monsters in Bibb County may have been eligible for the death penalty for what they did to those babies in that bunker. 

It’s time for Alabama to open its eyes. 

This crisis is not rare. 

It is real. It is relentless. 

And it is happening in your community. 

And I will not stop fighting this fight. 

Pamela Casey was elected District Attorney of Blount County in 2010. From 2007-2011, she  served as an Assistant Attorney General. She is a candidate for Attorney General in 2026.