The 45th Execution of 2025
Mark Allen Geralds, convicted of fatally stabbing a woman during a home invasion decades ago was executed December 9, 2025 n Florida, reported The Associated Press.
Geralds, 58, was pronounced dead at 6:15 p.m. following a three-drug injection
at Florida State Prison for the February 1989 murder of Tressa Pettibone. The
execution was the 18th in Florida this year, further extending the state record
for total executions in a single year with one more planned next week.
Asked if
he had any last words, Geralds addressed someone by name, but the name was
inaudible. He said, “I’m sorry that I missed you.” He then added, “I loved you
every day.”
Once the
drugs began flowing, he took about a dozen deep breaths. His body then quivered
and twitched, his mouth opening and closing. Within three or four minutes,
Geralds became still.
After the
execution was carried out, a victim advocate from the state attorney’s office
read a statement on behalf of the Pettibone family. It said the family has
“endured so much as this long legal journey has seemed unending at times.”
“Tomorrow,
when we wake up, it will be the first time in nearly 37 years that we don’t
have to worry about another appeal being filed or another law changing that
could potentially thwart the justice we have been fighting so hard for for so
long,” the family said.
Florida
Department of Corrections spokesperson Jordan Kirkland said eight people
associated with Pettibone were at the prison for the execution, but it was not
clear how many of them were in the room as witnesses. None of them directly
addressed reporters.
Pettibone
was attacked in her Panama City home on Feb. 1, 1989. Later that day, her
8-year-old son arrived home from school and found his mother fatally stabbed on
the kitchen floor, according to court records. Geralds was a carpenter who had
previously done remodeling work at the home about a year before.
About a
week before the killing, Geralds ran into Pettibone and her two children at a
shopping mall, and Pettibone mentioned that her husband was away on business.
Later Geralds approached Pettibone’s son at the video arcade and asked when the
boy’s father would return and what time he and his sister left for and returned
from school each day, according to the records.
Investigators
found that Geralds had subsequently pawned jewelry with traces of Pettibone’s
blood on it, and plastic ties used to bind Pettibone matched ties found in
Geralds’ car, the records showed.
Geralds
was convicted of murder, armed robbery and other charges and sentenced to death
in 1990. The Florida Supreme Court later vacated the sentence but affirmed the
conviction, and Geralds was resentenced to death in 1992.
After
a death
warrant was signed last month and his execution date set, Geralds told
a judge he did not wish to pursue any further appeals. The judge signed off on
that decision.
Pettibone’s
family described her in their statement as “a faithful wife, loving mother,
daughter, sister, aunt and dedicated friend.” Her family “was her world, and
everything she did centered around them.”
They
recalled her love for the holiday season, describing her as a “Christmas nut”
who decorated the house with lights, multiple trees and “ornate Santa Clauses
and reindeer” and baked cookies, bread, cakes and pies. She enjoyed making
gifts, and her family said they still display her handmade crafts every year.
Pettibone
“was a wonderful person with a family and many friends who loved her dearly,”
the statement said. “Today we crossed the finish line for her, and we close
this very painful chapter in our lives.”
Including
Tuesday’s execution, a total of 45 men have
died by court-ordered execution so far this year in the U.S., with a handful of
executions scheduled in what remains of the year.
Since the
U.S. Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976, the last highest
previous annual total of Florida executions was eight in 2014. Florida has
executed more people than any other state this year. Another execution is
planned next week in the state under death warrants signed by Republican Gov.
Ron DeSantis.
Frank
Athen Walls, 58, is scheduled for Florida’s 19th execution this year on Dec.
18. He was convicted of fatally shooting a man and woman during a home invasion
robbery and later confessing to three other killings.
Florida executions are by lethal injection using a sedative, a paralytic and a drug that stops the heart, according to the state Department of Corrections.
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