
Double murderer Stephen Stanko executed after final meal of cherry pie and banana pudding
A DOUBLE murderer was executed by injection after a final meal of cherry pie and banana pudding.
One of Stephen Stanko's two death sentences was for killing Henry Turner and emptying his bank account in 2005.
1
Hours earlier he had strangled girlfriend Laura Ling in her home.
Stanko, 57, also raped and slit the throat of the woman's teenage daughter, who survived.
In a three-minute statement in Columbia state prison, South Carolina, he apologised to his victims and asked not to be judged.
He said: 'I have lived for approximately 20,973 days but I am judged solely for one.
'Once I am gone, I hope that Laura's family and Henry's family can all forgive me.
"The execution may help them. Forgiveness will heal them.'
His last meal was fried fish, shrimp, crab cakes, baked potato, carrots, okra, cherry pie, banana pudding and sweet tea.
He was pronounced dead at 6.34pm local time on Friday — 28 minutes after the first jab.
It was South Carolina's sixth execution in nine months.
The state's two previous death-row inmates chose firing squad.
A third option is electric chair.

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


The Independent
32 minutes ago
- The Independent
‘No Kings' protests span 2,000 locations across the US
Nationwide 'No Kings' demonstrations spanned 2,000 locations, protesting against President Trump and his administration. Protests were largely peaceful, but clashes with police were reported in some areas, including downtown Los Angeles, where tear gas was used to disperse crowds. In San Francisco and Virginia, drivers struck protesters, with police investigating the incidents as possible intentional acts. Law enforcement officials in Texas evacuated the state capitol in Austin following a 'credible threat' to lawmakers attending the protests. Demonstrations took place in numerous cities, including West Palm Beach, Philadelphia, and New York, with speakers like Rep. Jamie Raskin and Martin Luther King Jr's eldest son addressing crowds.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Australian deported from US says he was ‘targeted' due to writing on pro-Palestine student protests
An Australian man who was detained upon arrival at Los Angeles airport and deported back to Melbourne says United States border officials told him it was due to his writing on pro-Palestine protests by university students. Alistair Kitchen said he left Melbourne on Thursday bound for New York and was detained for 12 hours and interrogated by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials during the stopover in Los Angeles. The 33-year-old said he was 'clearly targeted for politically motivated reasons' and said officials spent more than 30 minutes questioning him about his views on Israel and Palestine including his 'thoughts on Hamas'. Kitchen said officials asked him for his 'thoughts about the conflict in a very broad sense', including about student protesters, what Israel 'should have done differently' and 'how I would resolve the conflict'. 'It was quite an in-depth probing of my views on the war,' he said. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email Kitchen said he was deported and landed back in Melbourne on Saturday morning. 'The CBP explicitly said to me, the reason you have been detained is because of your writing on the Columbia student protests,' he told Guardian Australia on Sunday. The US Department of Homeland Security has been contacted for comment. Kitchen said he lived in New York for six years and wrote about the protests staged in support of Gaza at Columbia University while he was a master's student at the college, before he moved back to Australia in 2024. 'Because I was a creative writing student, I took the opportunity to witness the protests and wrote about them in depth on my personal blog,' he said. This year, Kitchen published a piece on his blog, Kitchen Counter, on the Department of Homeland Security's detention of Mahmoud Khalil, the lead negotiator of the Columbia Gaza Solidarity Encampment. In the article, Kitchen said Khalil had been arrested 'on utterly specious grounds by a neo-fascist state' with the goal of 'the deportation of dissent'. He referred to the Trump administration's executive order of 30 January in which the government promised to go on the 'offense to enforce law and order' and 'cancel the student visas of all Hamas sympathizers on college campuses'. Kitchen, who was planning to return to New York for two weeks to visit friends, said he deleted 'sensitive political posts' from his blog as well as 'some social media' because he was aware of the increased risk of crossing the US border. However, he believed US border officials had used technology to link his posts to his application for a Electronic System for Travel Authorization (Esta), which allows eligible visitors to make a short trip to the US without a visa. He said he was called for over the intercom shortly after exiting the plane at Los Angeles international airpot and 'taken into a back room' for secondary processing 'Clearly, they had technology in their system which linked those posts to my Esta … a long time before I took them down,' he said. 'Because they knew all about the posts, and then interrogated me about the posts once I was there.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Kitchen said he wanted other Australians to be aware that 'cleaning' their phones wouldn't necessarily mean they would be able to get their Esta approved upon arrival in the US. 'They had already prepared a file on me and already knew everything about me,' he said. Kitchen said he agreed to give officials the passcode for his phone, which he now regretted. 'I had at that time, the wrong and false hope that once they realised I was, you know, just a Australian writer and not a threat to the US that they would let me in,' he said. 'But then they took my phone away and began downloading it and searching it.' Kitchen said he was 'terrified of retribution and reprisal from the US government' for speaking out about his experience but he wanted people to know what had happened. He urged other Australians who were detained upon arrival into the US to accept 'immediate deportation' instead of handing their phones over the border officials. He said he had put the 'offending posts' back online on his blog. Kitchen said his phone and passport were handed to a Qantas flight attendant at the start of his deportation flight and he was unable to get them back until they landed in Melbourne. Qantas confirmed that its staff received a sealed envelope from US customs officials containing the passenger's personal items which was returned upon arrival in Australia. The airline declined to comment further.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Now it's Blake Lively's turn to squirm as compromising video resurfaces... and case against Justin Baldoni hits new snags
It's the twist nobody saw coming: Blake Lively claiming total 'vindication' after a New York judge sensationally tossed the defamation part of 's $400m countersuit against the actress and her husband . But the Daily Mail can exclusively reveal the 'total victory' that Lively's legal team claimed is not as clear cut as it may seem.