Louis Bernard Gaskin

Florida Death Row Inmate Louis Gaskin “Ninja Killer” Executed By Lethal Injection

Louis Bernard Gaskin
Louis Bernard Gaskin (Source: Booking Photo)

Florida death row inmate Louis Bernard Gaskin, 56, known as the “ninja killer,” was executed Wednesday at 6:15 pm for murdering a couple in Palm Coast, Florida, in 1989.

Gaskin had his last meal of barbecue pork ribs, pork and turkey neck, buffalo wings, shrimp fried rice, french fries, and water at 9:45 a.m., Department of Corrections spokesperson Kayla McLaughlin Smith said.

Before his execution, Gaskin said, “Justice is not about the crime. “It’s not about the criminal. It’s about the law.” He referred to his case and said “Look at my case.” Though parts of his statement were difficult to understand.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to block the execution of Gaskin.

A two-sentence order said justices denied a stay of execution and a petition to hear the case. As is common, the order did not explain the decisions.

Gaskin’s attorney appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court after the Florida Supreme Court last week rejected arguments aimed at preventing the execution. Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a death warrant last month, with Gaskin scheduled to be executed at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Florida State Prison.

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Gaskin was convicted in the murders of Robert and Georgette Sturmfels during a burglary of their Flagler County home.

A summary of the case included in the Florida Supreme Court opinion said Gaskin parked his car in a wooded area on Dec. 20, 1989, and shot Robert Sturmfels twice through a window of the home. He shot Georgette Sturmfels, who was trying to leave the room, and then shot Robert Sturmfels again, according to the summary. He shot Georgette Sturmfels again after seeing her through a door and then entered the home and shot both of them in the head, the filing said

After taking lamps, video-cassette recorders, cash and jewelry, Gaskins left the home and went to the home of Joseph and Mary Rector, according to the summary. After Joseph Rector got out of bed to investigate noise, he was shot, but the Rectors were able to get to a car and drive to a hospital.

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The appeals at the Florida Supreme Court and U.S. Supreme Court focused, in part, on arguments that a jury was not given evidence of Gaskin’s mental illness before recommending that he be sentenced to death. The jury voted 8-4 to recommend that Gaskin be executed, with a judge then issuing the death sentence.

“This (U.S. Supreme) Court has made clear that the consideration of mitigation (evidence) by the sentencer, is at the heart of the constitutionality of the death penalty,” Eric Pinkard, an attorney for Gaskin, wrote in the motion for a stay at the U.S. Supreme Court. “Because the trial judge and the recommending jury were denied the mitigation that was extant in Mr. Gaskin’s case, the recommending jury and the trial court never focused on the unique circumstances of Mr. Gaskin. His deprivation, mental illness, and trauma he suffered was never heard, thus falling to meet the minimum constitutional requirements.”

But in a response filed at the U.S. Supreme Court, Attorney General Ashley Moody’s office wrote that Gaskin’s petition for justices to take up the case was an “attempt to deprive his victims of justice on the eve of his execution for heinous crimes committed decades ago. Every question he presents now should have been (or was) asked and answered long ago.”

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The Florida Supreme Court’s 21-page decision last week said Gaskin’s mental-illness argument was “procedurally barred” because it had been rejected in earlier court proceedings after the conviction.

“Even if Gaskin’s claim was not procedurally barred, he still would not be entitled to relief,” the decision said. “In denying initial postconviction relief, the circuit court concluded that defense counsel made reasonable strategic decisions not to present certain evidence and the testimony of certain witnesses because that would have resulted in the jury hearing highly negative information about Gaskin.”

Gaskin is scheduled to be the second Florida inmate executed in less than two months.

The state on Feb. 23 put to death Donald David Dillbeck, who murdered a woman in 1990 during a carjacking in a Tallahassee mall parking lot. Dillbeck, 59, was the 100th inmate executed in Florida since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.

Before Dillbeck’s execution, the state had not carried out a death sentence since Gary Ray Bowles was put to death by lethal injection in August 2019 for a 1994 murder in Jacksonville.

DeSantis last week also signed a death warrant for Darryl Barwick, who was convicted of murdering a Bay County woman in 1986. Barwick is scheduled to be executed May 3.

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