The 27th Execution of 2025
A man convicted of the 1994 killings of his wife and their
two children became the ninth person put to death in Florida this year, his
death on July 31, 2025 marking a state record for a single-year execution total since
the U.S. Supreme Court restored the death penalty decades ago, reported The Associated Press.
Edward Zakrzewski, 60, was pronounced dead at 6:12 p.m.
following a three-drug injection at Florida State Prison near Starke. After the
return of the U.S. death penalty in 1976, Florida carried out a high of eight
executions in 2014, a one-year total only matched this year with a mid-July
execution and now exceeded.
“I want to thank the good people of the Sunshine State for
killing me in the most cold, calculated, clean, humane, efficient way possible.
I have no complaint,” Zakrzewski said after the curtain to the death chamber
went up shortly after 6 p.m.
He was lying on a gurney covered with a white sheet. Before
the drugs began flowing, he also quoted from a poem as 14 witnesses looked on,
plus media reporters and prison staff.
Once the drugs were administered, Zakrzewski began breathing
deeply, surrounded by three Corrections Department staffers in dark suits. One
of them shook Zakrzewski by the shoulders and shouted his name. There was no
reaction, and then he was still.
Florida this year has carried out more
executions than any other state, while Texas and South Carolina are tied
for second with four each. A 10th execution is scheduled in Florida on Aug. 19 and
an 11th
on Aug. 28 under death warrants signed by Republican Gov. Ron
DeSantis.
No members of the victims’ family spoke with reporters after
Thursday’s execution.
Twenty-seven
men had died by court-ordered
execution so far this year in the U.S., while nine other people are
set to be put to death in seven states during the rest of 2025. Florida also
was the last state to execute someone, giving Michael
Bernard Bell a lethal injection on July 15.
Zakrzewski was sentenced to die for the June 9, 1994,
killings of his 34-year-old wife Sylvia and their children Edward, 7, and Anna,
5, in the Florida Panhandle. Trial testimony showed he carried out the killings
at their Okaloosa County home after his wife sought a divorce, and he had told
others he would kill his family rather than allow that to happen.
The woman was attacked first with a crowbar and strangled
with a rope, court testimony showed. Both children were killed with a machete,
and Sylvia was also struck with the blade when Zakrzewski thought she had
survived the previous assault, according to court records.
Zakrzewski’s lawyers filed numerous unsuccessful appeals
over the years, including a final plea for a stay of execution that the Supreme
Court denied on Wednesday.
On Thursday morning, Zakrzewski awoke at 5:15 a.m. and later
in the day had a meal that included fried pork chops, root beer and ice cream,
state Department of Corrections spokesman Paul Walker said. He said Zakrzewski
had one visitor and “remained compliant” as his execution time neared.
Kayle Bates, who was convicted of abducting a woman from an insurance office and killing her in 1982, is next scheduled to be executed in Florida on Aug. 19. DeSantis also has signed a death warrant setting an Aug. 28 execution date for Curtis Windom, who was convicted of killing three people in the Orlando area in 1992.
Florida uses a three-drug cocktail for its lethal injection:
a sedative, a paralytic and a drug that stops the heart, according to the state
Department of Corrections.
Before Thursday’s execution, opponents pointed to
Zakrzewski’s military service as an Air Force veteran and the fact that a jury
voted 7-5 to recommend his execution, barely a majority of the panel. They
noted that under current state law, he could not have received the death
penalty with a split jury vote.
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