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Chaining Record, DeSantis Signs Another Death Warrant: Mark Geralds, Who Murdered Tressa Pettibone in 1989

November 8, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Mark Geralds.
Mark Geralds.

Expanding a modern-era record for executions in a year, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday signed a death warrant for a man convicted of murdering a Bay County woman in 1989.

Mark Allen Geralds is scheduled to be executed Dec. 9 for the murder of Tressa Lynn Pettibone, a 33-year-old Panama City Beach mother who was beaten and stabbed to death in her home. Pettibone’s body was discovered on the kitchen floor by her 8-year-old son, Bart, when he returned from school on Feb. 1, 1989, according to court records. Tressa Lynn Pettibone was stabbed three times in her neck.

“The medical examiner found numerous bruises and abrasions on Ms. Pettibone’s head, face, chest, and abdomen that were caused by some form of blunt trauma. The medical examiner also determined that the Ms. Pettibone’s wrists had been bound with a plastic tie for at least twenty minutes prior to her death,” Attorney General James Uthmeier wrote in a review of Geralds’ case that accompanied Friday’s death warrant.

Geralds, 58, was convicted in 1990 of murdering Pettibone, robbing her house and stealing her car. A jury unanimously recommended the death penalty, and his conviction and death sentence were upheld by the Florida Supreme Court in 2006.

Typically, the signing of a death warrant begins a flurry of legal activity about whether the execution should be carried out.

If Geralds’ execution goes forward, he could be the 18th death row inmate to be executed in what has been a record year in Florida. Fifteen men have been put to death by lethal injection in 2025, and two men are awaiting execution this month.

Asked about his pace of signing death warrants, DeSantis on Monday said he is bringing justice to victims’ families.

The death penalty could be a “strong deterrent” if sentences were more quickly carried out, the governor told reporters. He suggested that the increase in death warrants could have started years earlier but that he needed time to get settled into office after first being elected in 2018 and that priorities shifted as the COVID-19 pandemic hit in early 2020.

The state did not execute any inmates in 2020, 2021 and 2022.

“I think we’re in a good spot now, and I want to make sure that people (Death Row inmates) that have exhausted all these appeals over many years, sometimes decades, like when all that’s done …, and there’s victims’ families that are wanting to see justice, that I’m doing my part to deliver that,” DeSantis said during an appearance in Jacksonville.

The previous record for executions in a year was eight in 1984 and 2014. The modern era represents the period since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, after a 1972 U.S. Supreme Court opinion halted it.

The state has carried out two executions per month since May.

Florida executed Norman Grim, 65, on Oct. 28 for the 1998 sexual assault and murder of Cynthia Chapman, an attorney who was his neighbor in Santa Rosa County. Samuel Smithers, 72, was put to death by lethal injection Oct. 14 in the 1996 murders of two women in Hillsborough County.

In addition to Smithers, inmates executed this year were Victor Jones on Sept. 30; David Pittman on Sept. 17; Curtis Windom on Aug. 28; Kayle Bates on Aug. 19; Edward Zakrzewski on July 31; Michael Bell on July 15; Thomas Gudinas on June 24; Anthony Wainwright on June 10; Glen Rogers on May 15; Jeffrey Hutchinson on May 1; Michael Tanzi on April 8; Edward James on March 20; and James Ford on Feb. 13.

DeSantis also has signed death warrants to execute Bryan Frederick Jennings on Nov. 13 and Richard Barry Randolph on Nov. 20. Jennings was convicted in the 1979 kidnapping, rape and murder of a 6-year-old girl in Brevard County, while Randolph was convicted in the 1988 rape and murder of a Putnam County convenience-store manager.

As of Monday, Florida had 256 inmates on death row, according to the state Department of Corrections website. Florida has had 30 people convicted and sentenced to death only to later be exonerated since 1973, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Illinois is next highest with 22, followed by Texas at 18.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. kola says

    November 8, 2025 at 11:41 am

    So? Your point? Capital punishment is non-existent in the Democrat’s vocabulary. You may murder others and not be held accountable. Thankful for the “sword of justice” to those who murder innocent people. That is why it is called the “Death Penalty.”

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  2. jim says

    November 8, 2025 at 11:51 am

    and you have a problem with that???

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  3. Bo Peep says

    November 8, 2025 at 12:03 pm

    Only 36 years later way to go Ron. Saving the taxpayers another 100k a month

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  4. JimboXYZ says

    November 8, 2025 at 12:20 pm

    The 18 death warrants, all of them slam dunks. This case & sentencing is 35 years of carrying out what common sense was a verdict & sentencing was in 1990. 2006 that was upheld. More on the case.

    https://truecrimearchives.blog/mark-allen-geralds-convicted-in-the-brutal-murder-of-tressa-pettibone/

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    • Pierre Tristam says

      November 8, 2025 at 2:03 pm

      Precisely: to you it’s just sport.

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  5. Land of no turn signals says says

    November 8, 2025 at 1:22 pm

    We need to figure out how to do 2 at a time and save even more money.

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  6. R.S. says

    November 8, 2025 at 2:17 pm

    So pointless. If executions were more quickly done–as our incredibly bright governor insists–they’d be a deterrent. That’s so dumb and uninformed. The rate of violent crime is greater in states WITH the death penalty than in states without it. A society has a right to keep itself safe; it doesn’t have a right to get even. By all standards of morality, the death penalty is wrong and quite pointless. The death penalty is an affirmation that the biggest bully on the block gets to do whatever s/he wishes; the state is the biggest bully. Murder is either done impulsively or with great deliberation and the feeling that the culprit is safe from prosecution. Either attitude is not affected one bit by deterrence. If only people could learn instead of indulging in the most primitive urges. And these are folks who profess Xtianity? I wish they’d try a goodly dose of human psychology instead.

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