Suspect in Navajo woman’s disappearance sentenced to 5 years for robbery
after plea deal
[May 09, 2026]
By SAVANNAH PETERS and JACQUES BILLEAUD
PHOENIX (AP) — The only person ever charged in the unsolved 2021
disappearance of Navajo elder Ella Mae Begay, whose case became
emblematic of a crisis fueled by disproportionately high rates of
violence faced by Native Americans, has been sentenced to five years in
federal prison.
U.S. District Judge Douglas Rayes in Phoenix on Friday accepted an
agreement in which Preston Henry Tolth pleaded guilty to robbing Begay.
Under the agreement, Tolth was credited with three years’ time served
and prosecutors dropped an assault charge and agreed not to prosecute
him in the future if Begay’s case develops.
The sentencing effectively closes a yearslong case that has been
troubled by a lack of physical evidence and the suppression of a
confession from Tolth, who also is Navajo.
During Friday's hearing, family members urged Rayes to reject the
agreement. Begay's niece tearfully reiterated that they didn’t want
Tolth released without him leading investigators to Begay.
“A 62-year-woman is still nowhere to be found. No amount of time is
enough if he won’t tell us where she is,” said Seraphine Warren, who
later left the courtroom when it was apparent the judge was moving
forward with the sentencing.
A beloved grandmother of nine and talented weaver of Navajo-style
pictorial rugs, Begay was 62 when she vanished from her home in
Sweetwater, Arizona, on the Navajo Nation in June 2021. Tolth’s
sentencing comes amid a week of awareness for the Missing and Murdered
Indigenous Peoples movement, which highlights the disproportionate
number of Native Americans who are missing or have been killed.
In the years since Begay went missing, her family members have organized
searches, pushed law enforcement for answers and even walked across the
country to keep a public spotlight on her case. Advocates have compared
Begay’s case to that of Gabby Petito, a young white woman whose
disappearance the same summer drew a frenzy of news coverage, social
media attention and law enforcement action that ultimately led to the
discovery of her remains in Wyoming.

Navajo Nation police and FBI agents identified Tolth as a suspect within
days of her disappearance. Tolth, whose father was dating Begay’s
sister, initially denied any involvement. In a later interrogation, an
FBI agent lied to Tolth, telling him police found Begay’s truck and were
processing evidence that would implicate him. In response, Tolth waived
his right to remain silent and confessed to stealing Begay’s pickup
truck, beating her and leaving her for dead on the side of the road.
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Theda Moreno, Cassandra Fraser and Tatum Escott attend an event to
honor and raise awareness for Indigenous people who are missing or
who have been killed, Tuesday, May 5, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (Sarah
Liese/KOSU via AP,File)

It is typically legal for U.S. law enforcement to fabricate evidence
during interrogations. But Rayes ruled that in this instance, the
FBI agent failed to “scrupulously honor” Tolth’s initial refusal to
speak and threw the confession out. A panel of appellate court
judges agreed.
In the absence of that confession, U.S. Attorney Tracy Van Buskirk
said Friday that the plea agreement was the government's best
attempt at securing a reasonable sentence. Speaking about Tolth’s
effort to help investigators find Begay, Van Buskirk said Tolth
wasn’t familiar with the Sweetwater area and had been drinking
alcohol on the night when he robbed her.
In court Friday, Begay’s son Gerald Begay called the agreement a
“failure.”
“It shouldn’t be that way,” Gerald Begay told the judge.
Jane McClellan, a lawyer for Tolth, said her client acknowledged
robbing Begay, showed officers where he thought he might have left
her on the night of the crime and doesn't have further information.
“He is remorseful for his actions,” McClellan said. “He has taken
responsibility for his actions.”
In an unusual move, Rayes rejected a previous plea agreement that
called for Tolth to be released after three years of time served,
saying it was overly lenient. Begay's family members had presented
anguished testimony and said they would prefer to the case went to
trial.
Navajo Nation public safety director Michael Henderson said finding
Begay is still a priority for tribal law enforcement.
“One of the hindrances is that the federal investigation is still
pending,” Henderson said.
Once federal law enforcement officially close the case, Henderson
said, Navajo Nation police may gain access to information that will
aid their search.
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