ST GEORGE, Utah (ABC4) — In June 2024, police arrested a double-homicide suspect after an hour-long manhunt that frightened residents in Washington County. Today, she was ruled competent to proceed in her court case.
Mia Bailey, 29, was charged with two counts of aggravated murder, one count of attempted murder, seven counts of felony discharge of a firearm, and aggravated burglary for the murder of her parents at their home in Washington City.
A doctor provided an evaluation of competency, which was reviewed by Judge Keith C. Barnes, Bailey’s attorney Ryan Stout, and the prosecution.
“I think it does a good job of pointing out the litany of mental health issues that my client has had over the years and currently, but also does a good job of going through and applying my client’s current status and ability to comprehend the proceedings,” Stout stated.
Stout went on to say that he would submit to the findings that Bailey was competent to proceed. Judge Barnes ruled that they would move forward with the evaluation and find her competent.
Judge Barnes began making plans for the following hearing and also confirmed that the State of Utah had recently made a formal offer to Bailey. If that formal offer did not settle the case, Judge Barnes said, they would move forward with scheduling a jury trial at the next hearing on Nov. 6.
Bailey chimed in at the end of the hearing and asked her attorney, Stout, to request a bail hearing. He started explaining to Judge Barnes that he previously told Bailey he wouldn’t, but was cut off by her.
“I have to get my surgery and meds fixed,” Bailey said, giving a reason for requesting the bail hearing.
Stout told her and Judge Barnes that he would not request the bail-reduction hearing.
“If he’s not requesting it, then I’d like to fire my lawyer,” Bailey stated.
Judge Barnes said that she needed to give notice to the prosecution to request the hearing, and that if she did, they could have a bail reduction hearing as part of the November court date.
On June 18, 2024, just after 7 p.m., officers with the Washington City Police Department were dispatched to reports of possible gunshots near Chinook Drive in Washington City. They were told that a yellow Kia Soul had fled the area shortly after gunshots were heard. Dispatch was told that a family member living at the home believed two people had been shot and killed.
Officers arrived to find the door slightly open and entered the home due to concerns that the victims had been shot. Two adult victims were located: Gail and Joseph Bailey. Both were pronounced deceased at the scene. The suspect was not inside the house.
A manhunt was ignited to locate the suspect. Officers were told that the suspect was a child of the victims. Family told police that she was a transgender individual who was known to wear wigs, meaning that they could find the suspect with short or long hair. The suspect was identified as Mia Bailey, whose birth name was Collin. She legally changed her name to Mia and was transitioning from male to female.
Several hours later, just before 1 a.m. on June 19, 2024, Mia Bailey was sighted walking near Horseman Park and River Road in St. George. When officers tried to stop her and make contact, she “retrieved a handgun from her waistband and placed it to her head.” Mia Bailey walked into the brush, out of sight of the officers.
A containment area was set up, and multiple agencies responded to the area. Mia Bailey was located again near the new St. George Temple. SWAT dispatched a negotiator, who eventually got Mia Bailey to surrender after 8 a.m. on June 19. She was booked into Purgatory Correctional Facility in Washington County.
In an interview with Mia Bailey following her arrest, she told officers that she went to the house and immediately began shooting at her mother and then her father when he approached her. She shot them both multiple times, even after they had already collapsed to the ground in order to “make sure they were dead.”
“I would do it again. I hate them,” Mia Bailey allegedly told police during the interview. Officers said that she told them she felt no remorse and would not change what she had done. She also allegedly bragged about avoiding arrest.
On June 21, 2024, the Washington County Attorney’s Office filed charges against Mia Bailey. She was charged with nine first-degree felonies and one third-degree felony, including: aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, felony discharge of a firearm, and aggravated burglary.
The Washington County Attorney’s Office also announced that it would not be seeking the death penalty in this case.
While being held at the Purgatory Correctional Facility, Mia Bailey allegedly attacked a corrections officer. On Oct. 28, 2024, she was reportedly refusing to comply with staff and leave her cell and struck a corrections officer in the face. After she was placed in handcuffs, she kicked another corrections officer in the knee.
One year after the alleged murders, Bailey pleaded not guilty to all charges on June 19, 2025.
A GoFundMe created for Joseph and Gail Bailey’s funeral expenses after their murder is still available online and can be found here.
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