
5-time convicted killer put to death in Florida uses his last words to thank executioner
Michael Bernard Bell, 54, was pronounced dead at 6:25 p.m. after receiving a lethal injection at the Florida State Prison, said Bryan Griffin, a spokesperson for Gov. Ron DeSantis.
4 Michael Bernard Bell, 54, was executed by lethal injection Tuesday evening.
AP
Advertisement
Surprisingly, Bell — who was sentenced to death for the fatal shooting of two people outside of a bar in 1993 — used his final breaths to show gratitude.
'Thank you for not letting me spend the rest of my life in prison,' he said.
4 Bell was sentenced to death for the murder of two people outside a bar in 1993.
Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Advertisement
The killer woke up bright and early for his final day at 6:30 a.m. and ate his last meal consisting of classic breakfast foods: an omelet, bacon, home fries and orange juice.
Bell, who killed five people — including a toddler — in his lifetime, only met with a spiritual advisor during his final hours.
Despite his apparent appreciation for his death sentence, Bell's lawyer had requested that the execution be stayed — which the US Supreme Court had rejected.
The court doubled down on its assertion that Bell should face the music with a 54-page opinion pointing to his guilt even as his legal team insisted they had newly discovered evidence about witness testimony.
Advertisement
4 Bell was also convicted of killing a woman and her toddler son and his mother's boyfriend in separate incidents.
Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Bell was convicted in 1995 and sentenced to death for the murders of Jimmy West and Tamecka Smith.
In December 1993, Bell spotted a car driven by West that was previously owned by a man who had killed his brother.
So, he called on two other friends and armed himself with an AK-47 for what he thought would be the vengeful assassination of his brother's killer. Instead, he gunned down West and Smith, who had no affiliation with his brother's death, in the car outside a bar, officials said.
Advertisement
Bell also opened fire on a nearby crowd before fleeing the scene. West died at the scene and Smith succumbed to her injuries en route to the hospital while a third passenger escaped unharmed.
He was arrested later that year with three extra murders tacked onto his record. In 1989, he shot and killed a woman and her toddler son. Then, just four months before the bar slaughter, he also killed his mother's boyfriend, officials said.
4 Bell's last meal included typical breakfast foods.
Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Bell's execution marks the 26th in the US this year, breaking 2024's morbid total with five more months left to go. He is also the eighth person to be put to death in Florida, a sharp uptick compared to just one last year.
The Sunshine State has executed more people this year than any other state.
On July 31, Edward J. Zakrzewski, II is set to be the ninth executed death row prisoner in Florida this year.
He was found guilty in 1996 for the slaughter of his family after he tried to seek a divorce from his wife, whom he beat with a crowbar and machete before strangling her to death. He also killed their two young children, just 7 and 5 years old, with the same machete.
With Post wires.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
4 cruise guests arrested for alleged drug possession in Bermuda
Four U.S. Carnival Cruise Line passengers were arrested in Bermuda for alleged drug possession. The guests were detained by cruise ship security for having 'a significant quantity of illegal drugs and drug paraphernalia, believed intended for distribution on the island,' the Bermuda Police Service said in a July 22 Facebook post. The alleged items included one package of carfentanyl, multiple compressed cannabis packages, vape pens and what were suspected to be THC gummies, authorities said. They were arrested upon entry to Bermuda. 'Carfentanyl is about 100 times stronger than fentanyl and was originally used to sedate large animals like elephants,' Acting Detective Superintendent Derricka Burns said in the post. 'Even tiny amounts can be deadly. This seizure may have prevented a potential tragedy.' The travelers, who were not named, are in police custody with charges 'expected to follow,' according to Bermuda police. Authorities did not specify which ship they were sailing on. 'We follow a zero-tolerance drug policy, as we strictly comply with all applicable laws and regulations, and we also advise our guests that they can be personally subject to local law enforcement actions,' Carnival told USA TODAY in an emailed statement. The Bermuda Police Service Narcotics Unit is investigating the case. Nathan Diller is a consumer travel reporter for USA TODAY based in Nashville. You can reach him at ndiller@


The Hill
3 hours ago
- The Hill
Minnesota state lawmaker to resign after burglary conviction
A Minnesota lawmaker is expected to resign from the state Senate after being criminally convicted of burglary on July 18. Democratic state Sen. Nicole Mitchell's departure will dissolve the party's one-seat majority in the upper chamber and comes after months of Republican criticism regarding her criminal record. 'Senator Mitchell's constituents deserve for her legislative projects to be finalized or ready to hand off to her successor before she resigns,' her attorney Dane DeKrey said in a statement to USA Today. 'Mitchell's constituents also deserve to have their outstanding issues handled before her resignation… It was the honor of her lifetime to serve her District and the State of Minnesota,' he added. She's slated to resign 'no later than Aug. 4.' Dekrey did not immediately respond to The Hill's request for comment on the matter. Mitchell, a former lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard and a meteorologist, was arrested last year while visiting her estranged stepmother to collect her deceased father's belongings. She used burglary tools to enter the home in the Detroit Lakes area. Minnesota Senate Republican Leader Mark Johnson (R), in a statement, once again condemned Mitchell's actions, stating 'her continued participation in the Minnesota Senate leaves the body with a stain on its record for every time her vote was the deciding vote in passing legislation.' Mitchell's resignation comes weeks after two Democratic lawmakers in the Minnesota legislature were shot at their respective homes. Rep. Melissa Hoffman (D) succumbed to gunshot wounds, as did her husband and Golden Retriever.


USA Today
5 hours ago
- USA Today
Republicans still have an Epstein dilemma. Now they have to face voters.
Drama over Jeffrey Epstein continues to plague lawmakers as they prep for August recess and an opportunity to reconnect in person with constituents. WASHINGTON – Republican lawmakers continue to debate a response to the Jeffrey Epstein dilemma that has roiled the MAGA base and equally frustrated President Donald Trump – while the 2026 midterm elections loom as a potential outlet for their voters to take out some of that vitriol. There are no easy answers to a complicated and dated criminal case from which an ample number of conspiracy theories have emerged. Some were touted by members of Trump's administration before their government employment. The debate around the disgraced financier and the Justice Department's recent review of his case, which found no evidence of a highly speculated client list or that Epstein had not committed suicide in 2019, has left Republicans in Congress between a Trump rock and MAGA hard place. More: Family feud: Trump at odds with MAGA movement on multiple fronts 'A very large group of Americans that have been concerned about this issue, that thought the administration or thought that Republicans were issuing a promise in good faith, are now realizing that perhaps they aren't operating as honestly as they had perhaps appeared,' Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York, told USA TODAY. 'The erosion of trust is something that once you lose, it's very difficult to come back,' she added. Tensions over how to address the Epstein case have engulfed the GOP-led House and threatened to backlog other legislative priorities. This week, the House Oversight Committee agreed to subpoena testimony from Ghislaine Maxwell, a longtime Epstein aide serving a 20-year prison sentence for conspiring with the financier. At the same time, pressure to address the Epstein scandal before the entire House prompted Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, to cut the chamber's schedule short and send lawmakers home a day early for their beloved summer breaks that serve as a vital opportunity to reconnect in person with constituents. Adding to the drama is Trump, who has a long personal history with Epstein and who has asked members of his party to move on from the issue while calling his supporters who do not 'weaklings.' Business not as usual Drama over the handling of Epstein's case review, which many GOP supporters are calling insufficient, butted into business on Capitol Hill as lawmakers worked to pass Trump's push for $9 billion in spending cuts to public broadcasting and foreign aid. Even after House leadership managed to temporarily quell dissent and see the budget measure through, lawmakers returned to Washington this week with some as irate as ever. 'I would like the House to follow order, (that) would be really nice,' Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia, told USA TODAY. 'We should probably be voting on all our appropriation bills and we're not. So, there's a lot of things I would like to see done.' Johnson said on July 21 there would not be a vote on anything Epstein-related, saying he wants to give the Trump administration 'space' to address the issue first. His comment underscored how House operations are at something of a standstill with attention still caught on a controversial, years-old criminal case. 'I think he's scared. I think he's terrified,' Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Kentucky, said of Johnson on July 21. Massie has spearheaded a bipartisan effort with Rep. Ro Khanna, D-California, to force the administration's hand in publicizing files. Republican voters were 'promised this, they expected this, and it's not happening,' Massie said. 'But at the same time, he feels an allegiance to President Trump, who's gone against the MAGA base on this. So I think he's torn.' Lawmakers brace for reception back home Disputes in the House are unfolding ahead of the five-week break from Washington. Lawmakers will head home to their states and districts, and Republicans are expecting to face some scrutiny from disgruntled constituents. A Reuters/Ipsos poll taken July 15-16 found 69% of Americans believe the federal government is hiding details about Epstein's clients. Trump's popularity has taken a hit. A Quinnipiac University poll around the same time found 63% of voters disapprove of how his administration is handling the issue. Republicans this year have already faced heated town halls back home, prompting leadership to encourage members to quit holding events. 'There are a lot of people here in the swamp who think that, 'Oh, well if we spend five weeks on vacation, the pressure for this will dissipate,'' Massie said. 'I don't think it's going to dissipate. I think it's going to build.' 2026 midterms loom ahead Could the pressure build to next year's midterms? Potentially. "Democrats didn't put the Epstein matter into the public domain," House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a press conference on July 14. "This was a conspiracy that Donald Trump, (Attorney General) Pam Bondi and these MAGA extremists have been fanning the flames of for the last several years, and now the chickens are coming to roost.' Democrats already have the historical edge next November as the party that does not hold the White House typically performs better in midterm elections. Both Democratic and Republican presidents suffered stinging defeats that led to them losing one or both chambers of Congress during the 1994, 2006, 2010, 2018 and 2022 campaign cycles. For the 2026 elections, Democrats say they plan to hit their GOP opponents with recent controversial moves, including Trump's sweeping tax, policy and spending bill that could affect millions of Americans' Medicaid coverage, as well as the cuts to public broadcasting and global programs. Epstein may be one more name on their list of talking points ‒ and Republicans such as Massie are sounding the alarm now. 'It will follow each individual Republican through the midterms. It will follow people into their primaries,' Massie said. 'Did you support transparency and justice or did you come up here, get elected and fall into the swamp?'