The 23rd Execution of 2025
Stephen Stanko, a South Carolina man sent to death row twice for separate murders was put to death June 13, 2025 by lethal injection in the state’s sixth execution in nine months, reported The Associated Press.
Stanko, 57, was pronounced dead at 6:34 p.m.
He was
executed for shooting a friend and then cleaning out his bank account in Horry
County in 2005.
Stanko also
was serving a death sentence for killing his live-in girlfriend in her
Georgetown County home hours earlier, strangling her as he raped her teenage
daughter. Stanko slit the teen’s throat, but she survived.
The
execution began after a 3 1/2 minute final statement where Stanko apologized to
his victims and asked not to be judged by the worst day of his life. Witnesses
could hear prison officials asking for the first dose of the powerful
sedative pentobarbital which was different from previous executions.
Stanko
appeared to be saying words, turned toward the families of the victims and then
let out several quick breaths as his lips quivered.
Stanko
appeared to stop breathing after a minute. His ruddy complexion quickly
disappeared and the color drained from his face and hands. A prison employee
asked for a second dose of pentobarbital about 13 minutes later. He was
announced dead about 28 minutes after the execution started.
Three
family members of his victims stared at Stanko and didn’t look away until well
after he stopped breathing. Stanko’s brother and his lawyer also watched.
Attorney Lindsey Vann, who watched her second inmate client die in seven months
rubbed rosary beads in her hands.
Stanko
was leaning
toward dying by South Carolina’s new firing squad, like the past two
inmates before him. But after autopsy results from the last inmate killed by
that method showed the bullets from the three volunteers nearly
missed his heart, Stanko went with lethal injection.
Stanko was
the last of four
executions scheduled around the country this week. Florida and Alabama each
put an inmate to death on Tuesday. On Wednesday, Oklahoma executed
a man transferred from federal to state custody to allow his death
The
federal courts rejected Stanko’s last-ditch
effort to spare his life as his lawyers argued the state isn’t
carrying out lethal injection properly after autopsy results found fluid in the
lungs of other inmates killed that way.
Also South
Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster refused clemency in a phone call to prison
officials minutes before the execution began.
A governor
has not spared a death row inmate’s life in the previous 48 executions since
South Carolina reinstated the death penalty about 50 years ago.
Stanko is
the sixth inmate executed in
South Carolina in nine months after the state went 13 years without
putting an inmate to death because it could not obtain lethal injection drugs.
The South Carolina General Assembly approved a firing squad and passed a shield
law bill which allowed the suppliers of the drugs to stay secret.
In his
final statement, Stanko talked about how he was an honor student and athlete
and a volunteers and asked several times not to be judged by the night he
killed two people.
“I have
live for approximately 20,973 days, but I am judged solely for one,” Stanko
said in his final statement read by his lawyer.
Stanko
apologized several times to his victims and their families.
“Once I am
gone, I hope that Christina, Laura’s family and Henry’s family can all forgive
me. The execution may help them. Forgiveness will heal them.”
Stanko ate
his last meal on Wednesday as prison officials give inmates a chance to enjoy
their special food before their execution day. He ate fried fish, fried shrimp,
crab cakes, a baked potato, carrots, fried okra, cherry pie, banana pudding and
sweet tea.
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