—June 13, 1983: Circuit Judge S. James Foxman sentences Stano to death for the murders of Susan Bickrest and Mary Kathleen “Katie” Muldoon.
—December 2, 1983: Stano convicted in Brevard County for the murder of Cathy Scharf and sentenced to death about a week later.
—August 1985–June 1986: Stano agrees to be interviewed by Kathy Kelly, a staff writer at the
Daytona Beach News-Journal
. During the course of that time, he also wrote forty letters to her, talking of his life and the crimes.
—March 23, 1998: Years of appeals end when Gerald Stano dies in Florida’s electric chair.
Photos Insert
1
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, November 3, 1985
2
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, August 21, 1985
3
Ted Bundy was actually on death row at the same time. At some point, Stano wrote: “Yes I know, Bundy is in the next cell,” but he clearly was not very interested in talking about his infamous fellow inmate. Bundy was getting all the attention.
6
No other member of the Stano family corroborated this story.
7
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, August 21, 1985
10
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, August 15, 1985
11
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, August 15, 1985
12
Drs. Frank Carrera and George W. Barnard, Volusia County psychiatrists
13
Ramona Neal’s polka-dot bathing suit was a key factor in identifying her remains. Because it had been exposed to the elements, however, an investigator hung it on the clothesline at home to dry it out before tagging it as evidence. Unfortunately, a dog ripped it down from the clothesline and took off with it. Luckily, however, the suit ultimately wasn’t needed at a trial because Stano pleaded guilty.
14
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, January 19, 1986
15
February 26, 2008, by Kathy Browning, Associated Content. Reprinted courtesy of Kathy Browning.
18
“I had . . . a light green 1973 Plymouth Duster. It was a small about six engine with a 3 speed on the column, with Avenger 60’s with chrome slotted mags and high-jack air shocks, am/fm stereo eight-track, anti-theft door locks, and always in immaculate condition. It even had two chrome mirrors I put on. I was really proud of that car. I got it brand new from Cheltenham Chrysler in Penn.”—Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, August 29, 1985
19
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 21, 1985
20
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 21, 1985
21
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 21, 1985
22
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 21, 1985
23
This version of events was somewhat contradicted in a letter Stano later wrote to Kathy Kelly dated October 21, 1985, where he indicated that he left Bauer’s car in the motel parking lot, then hitchhiked back to Daytona Beach, retrieved his car, then drove back to Pennsylvania.
24
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 21, 1985
25
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 27, 1985
26
Even decades later, Toni’s mother, Jackie Haddocks, never responded to repeated contact attempts. Perhaps she wanted to forget. Perhaps she remembered too much.
27
In later years, Stano never discussed Toni Van Haddocks’s murder. Maybe he felt his macho image would be tarnished if he discussed buying sexual favors. This was probably made even worse by the fact that Van Haddocks was black, since misogyny and racism ranked right up there, along with murder, in Stano’s long list of deplorable qualities.
28
Writer Kathy Kelly posed the question to Stano: “What made you kill and kill again?”
29
Ted Bundy had not yet been convicted when
Classifying Criminal Offenders: New System Based On MMPI (SAGE Library of Social Research)
, by Edwin I. Megargee and M. J. Bohn, was published, but he would have received stellar marks on Dr. Megargee’s “Charlie” scale.
30
Under current Florida prison guidelines in 2009, that hobby is no longer permitted.
31
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, September 16, 1985
32
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, April 17, 1986
33
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, October 10, 1985
34
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, September 5, 1985
35
Gerald Stano to Kathy Kelly, November 3, 1985
36
It wasn’t until January 2000 that the Florida Legislature passed legislation allowing lethal injection as an alternative method of execution in Florida.