Editorial written by Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board.
Edward Zakrzewski II, 60, has spent nearly half of his life on Death Row, where next Thursday he is to be the ninth person executed in 2025, a modern one-year Florida record.
Only Gov. Ron DeSantis, who signed the death warrant, knows why he didn’t select one of the 120 other inmates who have been there longer, or why he doesn’t answer the many religious leaders who regularly plead with him to shut down what is suddenly the nation’s most active death factory.
The Florida Conference of Catholic Bishops asked DeSantis, a Catholic, for a pause and a dialogue toward “a better way to achieve the ends of justice.” “We do have the ability to protect society without killing human beings,” the bishops said.
He has not replied.
At this pace of two executions a month, DeSantis would finish his two terms having carried out 48, the most by any Florida governor since records were kept. If he’s doing it to run for president again, which he hasn’t bothered to deny, it would be revolting.
No sympathy for a killer
This is not to suggest sympathy for Zakrzewski.
He killed his entire family. His crimes were especially horrible. He pleaded guilty to slaughtering his wife Sylvia and their two children in the Panhandle town of Mary Esther in 1994. Court records show that he meant to stop her from divorcing him and taking their two young children to her native Korea.
An Air Force sergeant from Kalamazoo, Mich., Zakrzewski murdered his wife with a crowbar and a machete that he bought that day and then hacked Edward, 7, and Anna, 5, to death, one after the other, after calling them to the bathroom to brush their teeth.
But another macabre aspect to this case is the state’s doing.
Zakrzewski will be at least the 46th inmate Florida has put to death whose jury did not vote unanimously for the death penalty. That practice is allowed in only one other state — Alabama. He would be the first since 1996 for whom so few jurors — seven of twelve — favored execution.
After a jury in Okaloosa County voted 7-5 for two of the deaths and deadlocked 6-6 for Anna’s, the judge decreed death for all three. Even three decades ago, in one of the most conservative counties in Florida, a significant number of jurors did not favor his execution.
Strikingly, Florida law now excludes the death penalty unless at least eight jurors recommend it. Alabama requires at least 10 of 12.
Non-unanimous juries
The Florida Supreme Court, which rejected Zakrzewski’s final appeal, contorts itself to avoid giving prisoners a retroactive break. Divided recommendations were legal in 1996 when he was sentenced. Judges could impose death sentences even when jurors did not vote for them.
In 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Florida’s law was unconstitutional for not requiring a unanimous jury vote to find any of the specified aggravating circumstances that justify a death sentence rather than life in prison without parole.