The 26th Execution of 2025
A
man convicted
of fatally shooting two people outside a Florida bar in 1993 as part
of an attempted revenge killing was executed on the evening July 15, 2025. He was the 26th person
put to death in the U.S. this year, exceeding the number of executions in all of 2024, reported The Associated Press.
Michael
Bernard Bell, 54, was pronounced dead at 6:25 p.m. after receiving a lethal
injection at Florida State Prison near Starke, said Bryan Griffin, a
spokesperson for Gov. Ron DeSantis. Bell was convicted in 1995 and sentenced to
death for the murders of Jimmy West and Tamecka Smith.
When the
team warden asked Bell if he had any final words, he responded, “Thank you for
not letting me spend the rest of my life in prison.”
Strapped
to a gurney, Bell was alert and looking around the death chamber as the drugs
began to flow into his outstretched left arm. After about 2 minutes, he closed
his eyes and stopped moving. His breathing became more labored for about a
minute and then slowed.
At 6:15
p.m., the team warden checked Bell’s eyes and shouted his name, but there was
no response. The color began to drain from Bell’s face about 6:20 p.m. A
medical worker entered the chamber at 6:24 p.m. and declared Bell dead a minute
later.
With
Bell’s death, the number of executions in the U.S. surpassed last
year’s total with more than five months left on the calendar. The
number of executions has largely trended downward nationally this century after
peaking with 98 in 1999. From 1995 to 2006, there was an average of about 67
executions per year.
John
Blume, the director of the Cornell Death Penalty Project, says the uptick in
executions doesn’t appear to be linked to a change in public support for the
death penalty or an increase in the rate of death sentences, but is rather the
function of the discretion of state governors.
“A number
of these people being executed are people that have been in the system for a
long time; they’ve been on death row for a long time,” Blume said, adding that
there are aggressive executives and attorney generals “who want to execute
these people.”
He pointed
to a sweeping executive
order signed by President Donald Trump on his first day back in office
aimed at urging prosecutors to seek the death penalty and preserving capital
punishment in the states.
“The most
cynical view would be: It seems to matter to the president, so it matters to
them,” Blume said of the governors.
Florida
Department of Corrections spokesperson Ted Veerman said Tuesday that the
department was well-prepared to do its duty as assigned by the courts and the
governor.
Bell is the eighth person executed in Florida this year, with a ninth scheduled for later this month. The state executed six people in 2023 but only one last year.
Florida
has executed more people than any other state this year, with Texas and South
Carolina tied for second place at four each. Alabama has executed three people,
Oklahoma has killed two, and Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi and
Tennessee each have killed one.
This
undated provided by the Florida Department of Corrections shows Michael Bell,
who is scheduled to receive a lethal injection at Florida State Prison near
Starke on Tuesday, July 15, 2025. (Florida Department of Corrections via AP)
In
December 1993, Bell spotted what he thought was the car of the man who fatally
shot his brother earlier that year, according to court records. Bell was
apparently unaware that the man had sold the car to West.
Bell
called on two friends and armed himself with an AK-47 rifle, authorities said.
They found the car parked outside a liquor lounge and waited. When West, Smith
and another woman eventually exited the club, Bell approached the car and
opened fire, officials said.
West died
at the scene, and Smith died on the way to the hospital. The other woman
escaped injury. Witnesses said Bell also fired at a crowd of onlookers before
fleeing the area. He was eventually arrested the next year.
Bell was
later convicted of three additional murders — a woman and her toddler son in
1989 and his mother’s boyfriend about four months before the attack on West and
Smith.
Prison
officials said Bell woke up at 6:30 a.m. and ate his last meal, which was an
omelet, bacon, home fries and orange juice. He met with a spiritual adviser but
did not have any other visitors.
His
lawyers argued in their state filing that Bell’s execution should be halted
because of newly discovered evidence about witness testimony. But justices
unanimously rejected the argument last week and pointed to overwhelming
evidence of Bell’s guilt.
The U.S.
Supreme Court denied Bell’s request to stay the execution.
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