
Arizona executes man by lethal injection for 2002 murder
put to death
by lethal injection in Arizona on Wednesday in the first execution in the southwestern U.S. state in more than two years.
Aaron Gunches, who had
dropped legal efforts
to halt his execution, was sentenced to death for the 2002 murder of Ted Price, his girlfriend's ex-husband.
"Justice for Ted Price and his family was finally served," Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes told reporters following the execution at a state prison in Florence, Arizona.
Media witnesses said Gunches was placed on a gurney in the death chamber and restraints were put on his arms and legs.
Asked if he had any last words, Gunches shook his head to say no.
Intravenous lines were then inserted into his arms and Gunches breathed heavily several times after the drugs began to flow, the witnesses said.
He lost consciousness and his chest stopped moving several minutes later.
Gunches was the first prisoner put to death in Arizona since November 2022.
Problems with administering lethal injections in previous executions led to a suspension of capital punishments while a review was conducted.
John Barcello, deputy director of the Arizona Department of Corrections, said Gunches's execution went as planned.
"By all accounts, the process went according to plan without any incident at all," Barcello told reporters.
Gunches was executed one day after a 46-year-old man convicted of rape and murder was put to death by nitrogen gas in the southern state of Louisiana.
Jessie Hoffman, who was sentenced to death for the 1996 murder of Molly Elliott, a 28-year-old advertising executive, was the first person
executed in Louisiana
in 15 years. Nitrogen gas has been used just four other times to execute a person in the United States —
all in Alabama
, the only other state with a protocol for the method, which involves pumping nitrogen gas into a facemask, causing the prisoner to suffocate.
Hoffman's attorneys sought to stop the execution saying in court filings the method is unconstitutional, violating the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. The state's attorney general said at least four people are expected to be executed this year.
The next execution is scheduled to take place in Oklahoma on March 20, and there are 11 remaining executions scheduled for 2025,
according to
the Death Penalty Information Center.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Newlywed Bride Fatally Stabbed in Home Depot Parking Lot Used Her Last Words to ID Husband as Killer
Aliccia Grant, 37, had just gotten married to Stephen Dennis, 36, when he fatally stabbed her while they were sitting in their car in a parking lot NEED TO KNOW Aliccia Grant, 37, was stabbed to death in September 2024 by her new husband while sitting in her car in a Home Depot lot Her husband, Stephen Dennis, 36, said they were talking about annulling their new marriage, say authorities Grant leaves behind two children An Arizona man who was convicted of fatally stabbing his newlywed wife in the parking lot of a Home Depot in 2024 has learned his fate. On Monday, Aug. 18, Stephen Dennis, 36, was sentenced to 18 years in prison for the fatal stabbing of his wife, Aliccia Grant, 37, a mother of two, Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell announced. Earlier this year, Dennis pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. 'This wasn't just a violent crime — it was an act of betrayal carried out by someone who should have been a source of safety, not fear,' Mitchell said in a press release. 'There is something especially cruel about a murder that takes place within a relationship that's intended to be built on trust. We will continue to aggressively pursue and hold violent domestic abusers accountable.' The shocking murder took place in the early morning hours of Sept. 9, 2024, when Phoenix Police responded to a call about a stabbing outside a Home Depot in north Phoenix. 'Witnesses walking nearby heard a woman screaming for help and discovered the victim in the driver's seat of a red Prius with multiple stab wounds,' Mitchell said in the release. Dennis, who was in the front passenger seat, got out of the vehicle, argued with a bystander, then fled the scene on foot after grabbing a bag from the car, witnesses said, according to Mitchell's release. Witnesses and officers rendered aid to Grant. 'As one of the officers continued to apply pressure to the victim's wounds, the victim made a dying declaration identifying Dennis as her attacker,' Mitchell said in the release. She was rushed to a nearby hospital where she was later pronounced dead. Shortly after the incident, Dennis called 911 and admitted to stabbing his wife, Mitchell said in the release. He also told officers where to find the murder weapon, which they were able to recover. Dennis told police the couple had recently married and were discussing an annulment at the time of the incident, Mitchell Dennis begins his sentence at the Arizona Department of Corrections, Grant's family is mourning her loss. In a GoFundMe set up to defray funeral costs and to help support Grant's two children, 10 and 16, her family wrote, 'Although Aliccia was taken from us far too soon, her endlessly hopeful energy left a permanent mark of inspiration on all of us who knew and loved her. 'She will be remembered as a loving daughter, sister, cousin, and friend, but most of all as a wonderful mom to her two beloved kids." If you are experiencing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233, or go to All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages. Read the original article on People
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Florida death row inmate Edward Zakrzewski has been executed
Three decades after brutally murdering his wife and kids and escaping to Hawaii, Edward Zakrzewski will be executed today after the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected an eleventh-hour attempt to halt the execution. Edward Zakrzewski has been executed Edward Zakrzewski was pronounced dead at 6:12 p.m. ET, Thursday, July 31. In his final words he said "I want to thank the good people of the Sunshine State for killing me in the most cold and calculated, clean, humane and efficient way possible. I have no complaints whatsoever." He then quoted Robert Frost''s famous poem, "He Stopped by Woods on a Snowy Evening," stopping partly way through. The execution phase got underway about 6:04 p.m., his breathing slowed nearly immediately after a few hard gasps, and he was pronounced by 6:13 p.m. None of the 13 people who witnessed the execution chose to speak during the press conference following the execution. Witnesses included media, law enforcement and Department of Corrections officials. A small group of protestors remained outside the prison as media were escorted out. Two Florida executions still scheduled for August Edward Zakrzewski's execution will set a new modern day record in Florida for the number of prisoners executed in a single year. Two additional inmates are scheduled to be executed by the end of August. Kayle Barrington Bates is currently slated for execution on Aug. 19 for the 1982 murder of a woman in Bay County. Kayle Bates was convicted of first-degree murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and attempted sexual battery in the1982 slaying of 24-year-old Janet Renee White of Lynn Haven. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis also signed a death warrant this week for Curtis Windom, who was convicted of killing three people in 1992 in Orange County. Windom's execution is scheduled for Aug. 28. Nationwide, there are 11 planned executions remaining in 2026, at least at this time, including Zakrzewski, Bates and Windom. Who is the executioner who administers Florida's lethal injection? The executioner is a private citizen who is paid $150 per execution. State law allows for his or her identity to remain anonymous. How does lethal injection work? According to Death Penalty Information Center, Florida authorizes lethal injection, three‑drug protocol (Etomidate, Rocuronium bromide, Potassium acetate). This is the option that will be used in today's execution. In one-drug executions, the prisoner is given a large dose of pentobarbital, which causes death. In multi-drug executions, the process starts with a sedative. In January 2017, Florida abandoned its use of midazolam as the first drug in its three-drug protocol and replaced it with etomidate, to make the prisoner unconscious. A second drug, usually rocuronium bromide, is then used to paralyze the body and stop breathing. The final drug, potassium acetate, stops the heart. Edward Zakrzewski has his last meal Edward Zakrzewski woke at 5 a.m. today, the day of his execution. For his last meal he had fried pork chops, fried onions, potatoes, bacon, toast, root beer, ice cream, pie and coffee. He had one visitor, who was not identified, and did not take advantage of meeting with a spiritual advisor. It is not known at this time if any family members plan to be in attendance, according to Paul Walker, deputy communications director for the Florida Department of Investigations. How does Florida execute death row inmates? Before 1923, executions were usually performed by hanging. The Florida Legislature passed a law replacing that method with an electric chair, which was built by prison inmates. The first person electrocuted by the state was Frank Johnson in 1924, for shooting and killing a Jacksonville railroad engineer during a burglary. Florida's current three-legged electric chair, nicknamed 'Old Sparky,' was built of oak by Florida Department of Corrections staff and installed at Florida State Prison in Raiford in 1999. Legislation passed in 2000 allows for lethal injection as an alternative to the electric chair. The choice is left up to the inmate. All executions, injection or electric chair, are carried out at the execution chamber located at Florida State Prison in Raiford. The executioner, a private citizen allowed to remain anonymous by state law, is paid $150 per execution. Where are death row inmates executed in Florida? Men on death row are housed at Florida State Prison and Union Correctional Institution in Raiford. Women are housed at Lowell Annex in Lowell. Florida law allows firing squads, hanging, nitrogen gas in executions Florida has added new options in 2025 for methods of execution. The Sunshine State has executed people by electrocution since 1924, and lethal injection was added in 2000. Among the 17 bills Gov. Ron DeSantis signed on May 22 was one that opens the door to nitrogen gas, hangings, and firing squads. House Bill 903, which called for sweeping changes in inmate lawsuits, mandatory minimum prison time, how inmates diagnosed with mental illness are treated and involuntary placement and treatment, among other things, also allows any form of execution, provided it was "not deemed unconstitutional," if electrocution or lethal injection is found to be unconstitutional or lethal injection drugs become unavailable. In recent years, states have turned to other methods of executions after some pharmaceutical companies have balked at providing lethal injection drugs. Convicted murderer and rapist Jessie Hoffman was executed by nitrogen gas in Louisiana, and South Carolina brought back firing squads for two murderers this year. Florida has also expanded the range of capital offenses. In 2023, the state added child rape as a capital offense, in defiance of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, and made it easier to impose a death sentence by repealing a unanimous jury requirement. The same day DeSantis signed HB 903 he also signed HB 693, which adds aggravating factors for capital felonies if the victim was gathered with one or more persons for a school activity, religious activity, or public government meeting. What happens on a death row inmate's day of execution? The Florida Department of Corrections lays out the detailed protocol for a convict's execution day. Its guidance includes in part: "A food service director, or his/her designee, will personally prepare and serve the inmate's last meal. The inmate will be allowed to request specific food and non-alcoholic drink to the extent such food and drink costs forty dollars ($40) or less, is available at the institution, and is approved by the food service director." "The inmate will be escorted by one or more team members to the shower area, where a team member of the same gender will supervise the showering of the inmate. Immediately thereafter, the inmate will be returned to his/her assigned cell and issued appropriate clothing. A designated member of the execution team will obtain and deliver the clothing to the inmate." "A designated execution team member will ensure that the telephone in the execution chamber is fully functional and that there is a fully-charged, fully-functional cellular telephone in the execution chamber. Telephone calls will be placed from the telephone to ensure proper operation. Additionally, a member of the team shall ensure that the two-way audio communication system and the visual monitoring equipment arc fully functional. "The only staff authorized to be in the execution chamber area are members of the execution team and others as approved by the team warden, including two monitors from FDLE. A designated execution team member, in the presence of one or more additional team members and an independent observer from FDLE, will prepare the lethal injection chemicals as follows, ensuring that each syringe used in the lethal injection process is appropriately labeled...." Death penalty opponents gather outside Florida prison Maria DeLiberato with Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty said she and a group of as many as 50 would be at the Florida State Prison facility in Raiford to conduct a prayer service for Death Row inmate Edward Zakrzewski, victims of his crimes and the families of all those involved. She said the most shocking thing about the state's decision to execute Zakrzewski is it's overlooking the fact that in 1996 a 12-person jury voted 7-5 to put him to death for the killings of his wife, Sylvia, and 7-year-old son Edward and did not even reach a majority in the case of 5-year-old Anna. "He wouldn't even be eligible for the death penalty in Florida today," she said. "In no other state in the country, or even present day Florida, would he be eligible for execution," she said. Most states, Alabama and Florida are exceptions, require a unanimous decision by a jury to impose a death sentence. Florida upheld the unanimous standard from 2017 until 2023. That year legislators changed the law to allow an 8-4 majority of jurors to be considered a sufficient majority. DeLiberato said that in her 22 years of practicing law she has never witnessed the "frenzied pace of executions" the state of Florida is seeing this year. Zakrzewski will be the ninth Floridian put to death this year and Gov. Ron DeSantis has signed death warrants to allow two more executions to occur in August. "The governor solely decides who lives and dies," she said. "He is certainly responsible for the number of killings this year." She said the governor has been asked by reporters and confronted by clerics regarding his stance on the death penalty and, when he addresses the issue at all, typically tends to refer those who ask to a statement he made in May about the heinous nature of the crimes committed by those on death row. Who has been executed in Florida in 2025? Michael Bernard Bell was executed July 15 for the 1993 revenge killings of 23-year-old Jimmy West and 18-year-old Tamecka Smith, who were gunned down with an AK-47 assault rifle outside a Jacksonville bar. Thomas Gudinas was executed June 24 for the 1994 murder of Michelle McGrath, who was attacked after leaving a night club in downtown Orlando and found dead in an alley the next morning. Anthony F. Wainwright was executed June 10 for the 1994 of Carmen Tortora Gayheart, a student at Lake City Community College and the mother of children ages 3 and 5. Gayheart was loading groceries into a Ford Bronco in a Lake City Winn Dixie parking lot when she was forced at gunpoint into her vehicle by Wainwright and another man, taken to a rural area and shot twice. Glen Edward Rogers, dubbed the "Casanova Killer" was convicted of murder in a cross-country killing spree of single mothers with reddish hair that began in Los Angeles on Sept. 28, 1995. He was executed May 15 for the murder of Tina Marie Cribbs, a 34-year-old mother of two, found stabbed to death in a Tampa hotel bathtub. Jeffrey Hutchinson, a Gulf War veteran, was executed May 1 for the shooting deaths of his girlfriend and her three children. The 62-year-old former U.S. Army Ranger was convicted for the 1998 murder of 32-year-old Renee Flaherty, and her three children: 9-year-old Geoffrey, 7-year-old Amanda, and 4-year-old Logan in Okaloosa County. Michael A. Tanzi was executed April 8 for the 2000 murder of Janet Acosta, a Miami Herald employee who was attacked on her lunch break. Edward T. James was executed March 20 for the brutal 1993 murders of 58-year-old Elizabeth "Betty" Dick and her 8-year-old granddaughter, Toni Neuner, who was raped in her metro Orlando city of Casselberry home. James He had been renting a room in Dick's home for about six months and had known the family for years, according to archived news stories. James D. Ford, 64, was executed Feb. 2, 2025 for the 1997 savage murders of Gregory and Kimberly Malnory in front of their toddler daughter in 1997. When is the next execution in Florida? When was the last execution? Edward Zakrzewski is scheduled to be executed on July 31, just two weeks after the execution of Michael Bell, who was convicted of murdering a Jacksonville couple in 1993 in a revenge killing aimed at the wrong person. Zakrzewski will be the ninth Florida inmate executed this year. The next Florida inmate facing execution is Kayle Barrington Bates on Aug. 19 for the 1982 murder of a woman in Bay County. Kayle Bates was convicted of first-degree murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and attempted sexual battery in the1982 slaying of 24-year-old Janet Renee White of Lynn Haven. Ron DeSantis also signed a death warrant for Curtis Windom, who was convicted of killing three people in 1992 in Orange County, on July 29. Windom's execution is scheduled for Aug. 28. This will be the second month in 2025 when two executions were held. Jeffrey Hutchinson and Glen E. Rogers were both put to death in May. Anthony F. Wainwright was executed in June. There have been executions every month this year except for January. In signing Zakrzewski's death warrant on July 1, DeSantis set the stage to break the modern-day record for number of executions in one calendar year set by former governors Bob Graham in 1984 and Rick Scott in 2014, with six months still left to go in 2025. Nationwide, there are 11 planned executions remaining in 2026, at least at this time, including Zakrzewski, Bates and Windom. Who is being executed? Who is Edward Zakrzewski? Edward J. Zakrzewski II pleaded guilty to killing his wife Sylvia inside their Okaloosa County home in 1994 by bludgeoning her with a crowbar, strangling her and striking her with a machete, according to court records. Then he turned the machete on his 7-year-old son, Edward, and his 5-year-old daughter, Anna, hacking them to death. At the time, Zakrzewski, now 60, was a 29-year-old tech sergeant stationed at Eglin Air Force Base who was unhappy that his wife was considering divorce. Zakrzewski came from Kalamazoo, Michigan and met his wife in 1986 when he was stationed in Montana. Sylvia, who is from South Korea, changed her name from Pun Im after their marriage. Zakrzewski was stationed in South Korea for three years between 1989 and 1992, and later transferred to Eglin Air Force Base in Florida and lived in Mary Esther in Okaloosa County in the Florida Panhandle. What time is the Florida execution today? The execution of Edward Zakrzewski, who killed his wife and two children in their Mary Esther home in 1994, will happen as scheduled at 6 p.m. ET tonight, July 31, at the Florida State Prison in Raiford. U.S. Supreme Court denies Zakrzewski's stay of execution request The United State Supreme Court denied Zakrzewski's writ of certiorari July 30 without dissent. Attorneys for the defendant had asked justices for a stay of execution and give consideration to the slim 7-5 margin by which a 1996 Circuit Court jury had voted to sentence Zakrzewski to death. It was more than 30 years ago, June 9, 1994, that Zakrzewski, a 29-year-old tech sergeant stationed at Eglin Air Force Base who was unhappy that his wife, Sylvia, was considering divorce, killed her and the couple's two children, 7-year-old Edward and 5-year-old Anna, inside the family's Mary Esther home. Attorneys for Zakrzewski, 60, urged the court to block the Death Row inmate's execution, arguing that Florida 'is an extreme outlier when it comes to capital punishment.' The attorneys filed a petition and a motion for a stay of execution July 24, two days after the Florida Supreme Court ruled against Zakrzewski. Zakrzewski's execution would make him the ninth inmate put to death by lethal injection this year, setting a modern-era record. The arguments at the U.S. Supreme Court centered on jury recommendations in 1996 before Circuit Judge G. Robert Barron issued three death sentences for Zakrzewski. Florida execution: Decades after airman butchered family, Edward Zakrzewski will be put to death in next Florida execution The jury voted 7-5 to recommend death sentences in the murders of Zakrzewski's wife, Sylvia, and 7-year-old son, Edward. The jury deadlocked 6-6 in its recommendation in the murder of Zakrzewski's 5-year-old daughter, Anna. In a rare move at a sentencing hearing held April 19, 1996, Barron overruled the jury and sentenced Zakrzewski to death for all three of the murders. An Appeals Court affirmed the judge's decision. Current Florida law requires that at least eight jurors recommend death for such a sentence to be imposed, while almost all other states that have the death penalty require unanimous jury recommendations. Zakrzewski's attorneys contend that executing him after the 7-5 recommendations and the override would be unconstitutional. This article originally appeared on Pensacola News Journal: Florida execution today is for killer Edward Zakrzewski - updates


New York Post
3 days ago
- New York Post
Desperate Arkansas death row prisoner begs to be state's first execution since 2017, while 10 others sue to block contested punishment
A death row prisoner in Arkansas is begging the state to kill him, but his death wish is being stalled by a lawsuit from 10 other inmates trying to stop a highly controversial execution method. Scotty Gardner, 60, has been on death row since his speedy conviction in 2018 for strangling his girlfriend to death with a curling iron cord and stealing her valuables to go gambling at a nearby casino. Before his death sentence, Gardner was previously convicted of attempted murder and served time for repeatedly shooting his ex-wife while she was six months pregnant in 1990. 3 Scotty Gardner, 60, has been pleading to be executed for years. Arkansas Department of Corrections Now, Gardner is begging for the sweet release of death so he can finally leave 'his cave' — a shoddy cell plagued with mold, poor plumbing, and 'a sink and drain in the floor that bugs crawl in and out constantly,' he wrote in an email to USA Today. The killer previously penned a letter to the Arkansas State Supreme Court in 2020 saying he'd accept any means of execution, including the firing squad or electric chair. He doubled down in a 2025 filing, writing, 'set a date and let's do it.' Other prisoners waiting on death row, however, aren't nearly as eager to meet their maker as Gardner and have thus complicated his request. Ten inmates filed a lawsuit against Arkansas for its use of nitrogen hypoxia as a means of execution after its new authorization went into effect on Aug. 5. 'Arkansas juries explicitly sentenced our clients to execution by lethal injection – not gas – and the General Assembly cannot rewrite those verdicts to impose death by this very different and highly problematic method,' Heather Fraley, an attorney for several of the plaintiffs, said in a press release announcing the filing. Death by nitrogen hypoxia consists of pumping the convicts with pure nitrogen gas, forcing them to suffocate, which Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi already permit to make up for the decreasing availability of the drugs needed for lethal injection, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. 3 Arkansas approved death by nitrogen hypoxia in early 2025. AlienCat – It's a largely untested means of execution that is used in the Sarco suicide pods, which can only be legally used in a handful of countries outside of the US. It's unclear how the state would administer a nitrogen hypoxia death. No one has been executed in Arkansas since 2017, and even then, it was the first time they'd followed through on the controversial death sentence in a dozen years. In 2017, then-Gov. Asa Hutchinson ordered eight executions to be carried out in just 11 days before its supply of lethal injection drugs expired. 3 Two people on death row in Arkansas died this year — but they weren't executed. Getty Images Four were quickly stayed and two were successfully carried out. The remaining two were allegedly botched, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Now, many death row inmates in Arkansas are just left to die in their cells before ever reaching their fate. Bruce Ward, the state's longest-serving death row prisoner, died of natural causes at the age of 68 on April 2. He was originally included in the 2017 lineup, but his execution was stayed. He sat on death row for a staggering 35 years. In early June, Latavious Johnson died of unspecified causes at 43 years old. He was originally sentenced for killing his father in 2000 and, later, fatally shanking a correctional officer in 2012.