The 39th Execution of 2025
Richard Kenneth Djerf convicted of killing four members of a Phoenix family over 30 years ago in an
act of revenge over stolen goods was put to death October 17, 2025 in Arizona’s second
execution of the year, reported The Associated Press.
Djerf, 55, died by lethal injection for the killings of Albert Luna Sr.
and Patricia Luna; their daughter Rochelle Luna, 18; and son Damien Luna, 5, at
their home on Sept. 14, 1993. Djerf, who was in prison for over 29 years, chose
not to seek clemency.
His
execution was the fourth
in the country this week and the 39th of the year.
“Those
four innocent victims deserve justice, and their loved ones deserve closure,”
said Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, whose office sought the execution.
Prosecutors
said Djerf blamed another family member, Albert Luna Jr., who did not witness
the killings, for an earlier theft of electronics and a gun from his apartment.
Djerf became obsessed with exacting revenge and went to the home months later
claiming to be delivering flowers, prosecutors said.
Authorities
say Djerf sexually assaulted Rochelle Luna and slashed her throat; beat Albert
Luna Sr. with an aluminum baseball bat then stabbed and shot him; and tied
Patricia and Damien Luna to kitchen chairs before fatally shooting them.
Djerf
declined to make any last statement. He did not put up any resistance but took
a few heavy breaths and emitted a brief snoring sound after the lethal drugs
were administered, John Barcello, deputy director of the Arizona Department of
Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry, said during a news conference Friday.
No
representatives of the victims were present, Barcello said.
It took
about 10 minutes for the execution team to insert the IV lines into his veins
so the drugs could be administered. After the first of two pentobarbital shots
were given, he made several sounds, including a grunt and puffing sound. About
15 minutes elapsed between the first pentobarbital shot and the declaration
that he was dead.
Barcello
said Djerf’s veins “were not optimal” and it required a few attempts to
successfully place the IV.
“By all
accounts the process went according to plan and without any incident,” Barcello
said. A month ago, Djerf released
a statement in which he acknowledged carrying out the killings and
apologized for the pain he caused.
Arizona
has been criticized in the past for taking too long to insert IVs during lethal
injection executions. Experts say it should take seven to 10 minutes from the
beginning of insertion until a proclamation of death.
The state
has paused executions twice since 2014 amid concerns over its use of the death
penalty.
There was
a nearly eight-year hiatus brought on by difficulties in obtaining the needed
drugs and criticism that a 2014 execution was botched: Joseph Wood was injected
with 15
doses of a two-drug combination over two hours, leading him to snort
repeatedly and gasp hundreds of times before he died.
Executions
resumed in 2022, and three
prisoners were put to death that year. They were paused again in 2023
after Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs ordered a review of the capital punishment
protocol and Democratic Attorney General Kris Mayes agreed not to pursue any
executions.
The review
ended in November 2024, when Hobbs fired a retired federal magistrate she had
appointed to examine execution procedures, and the state corrections department
announced changes in the lethal injection team.
Arizona
last carried out a death sentence in mid-March, executing
Aaron Brian Gunches for the 2002 killing of Ted Price.
With
Djerf’s execution, there are now 107 prisoners on Arizona’s death row.
Five more
executions are scheduled in the U.S. this year — two in Florida and one each in
Alabama, Oklahoma and Tennessee, according to the Death Penalty Information
Center.
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