Orlando Sentinel

After delay, Florida executes inmate convicted of killing 2

- By Jason Dearen

STARKE — Florida executed an inmate Thursday who was convicted of killing two people after a night of drinking decades ago.

Michael Lambrix, 57, died by lethal injection at 10:10 p.m. in the death chamber at Florida State Prison in Bradford County, according to the governor’s office. He was the second inmate put to death by the state since it restarted executions in August.

Before then, the state had stopped all executions for months after a Supreme Court ruling that found Florida’s method of sentencing people to death was unconstitu­tional. In response, the state Legislatur­e passed a new law requiring death sentences to have a unanimous jury vote.

Lambrix’s attorney, William Hennis, argued in an appeal to the nation’s high court that because his client’s jury recommenda­tions for death were not unanimous — the juries in his two trials voted 8-4 and 10-2 for death — they should be thrown out. The Florida Supreme Court has ruled that Lambrix’s case is too old to qualify for relief from the new sentencing system.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday night denied Lambrix’s last-ditch appeal.

Lambrix was convicted of killing Clarence Moore and Aleisha Bryant in 1983 after a long night of partying in a small central Florida town, Labelle, about 30 miles northeast of Fort Meyers. Lambrix said he was innocent.

“It won’t be an execution,” he said in an interview at the prison Tuesday, according to the Tampa Bay Times. “It’s going to be an act of cold-blooded murder.”

Lambrix’s first trial ended in a hung jury. The jury in the second trial found him guilty of both murders, and a majority of jurors recommende­d death.

He was originally scheduled to be executed in 2016, but that was postponed after the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in a case called Hurst v. Florida, which found Florida’s system for sentencing people to death was unconstitu­tional because it gave too much power to judges, instead of juries.

Florida’s Supreme Court has ruled that the new death sentencing system only applies to cases back to 2002.

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