Mark Geralds has waived all pending and future legal proceedings in his case and is scheduled to be executed by Florida officials on December 9, 2025. Mr. Geralds elected to forgo his appeals just days after Governor Ron DeSantis signed his death warrant, joining a documented group of death row prisoners who have also decided not to try and prevent their executions.
Mr. Geralds “indicated that his wish was to forgo all warrant proceedings and allow the execution to proceed,” wrote Bay County Circuit Court Judge Timothy Register in his order granting Mr. Geralds’ request to waive appeals. Judge Register found Mr. Geralds competent to make this decision and confirmed it was made “freely and voluntarily.” If carried out, Mr. Geralds’ execution would mark Florida’s 18th execution of 2025, a total far exceeding the state’s prior record of eight executions in one year. Mr. Geralds would also become the 171st execution volunteer since executions resumed in 1977, and the fifth volunteer of 2025.
Since 1977, execution volunteers have represented approximately 10% of all modern executions. There were four other volunteers in 2025: Aaron Gunches (AZ), James Osgood (AL), Richard Djerf (AZ), and most recently, Norman Grim (FL). Mr. Grim’s death warrant was signed despite him not having assigned counsel at the time, his previous attorney having failed to properly withdraw from his case after retiring. His new counsel was not appointed until four days after Gov. DeSantis signed the execution warrant, and Mr. Grim did not want them to file final appeals. Mr. Grim was a U.S. Navy veteran whose childhood was shaped by violence and abuse, and whose young adulthood was marked by mental illness and substance abuse. Mr. Grim was the fifth veteran Florida executed in 2025, and since his execution, two others have been executed: Bryan Jennings and Richard “Malik” Randolph. 2025 is among the deadliest year for veterans on death row, with nine veterans executed and one more scheduled for execution.
Research shows a strong correlation between volunteering for execution and mental health issues. A 2004 study by Cornell Law School Professor John Blume found that 88% of execution volunteers between 1977 and 2003 struggled with mental illness and/or substance abuse. In October 2024, DPI analyzed volunteers executed in the twenty years since Professor Blume’s study and found that among the first 165 execution volunteers, 87% had mental illness, substance abuse, or both. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, who adamantly opposed the death penalty, once called the practice of allowing mentally ill prisoners to waive their appeals and be executed “nothing less than state-administered suicide.”
Mr. Geralds was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1989 armed robbery, burglary, and murder of Tressa Pettibone in Panama City, Florida. He was initially sentenced to death in 1990, but the Florida Supreme Court vacated his death sentence while maintaining the conviction. He was sentenced to death again in 1993 and his sentence became final in 1996. In post-conviction appeals, Mr. Geralds alleged there was prosecutorial misconduct before and during his trial, that he had ineffective assistance counsel, and he raised constitutional concerns about lethal injection executions. All of these claims were denied, in addition to federal habeas relief.
In 2025, 44 people have been executed across 11 states. Florida is responsible for 17 of these executions, or 38.6%. Three more executions are scheduled in Florida and Tennessee in December 2025: Harold Nichols (12/11), Mark Geralds (12/12), and Frank Walls (12/18).
Mr. Geralds “indicated that his wish was to forgo all warrant proceedings and allow the execution to proceed,” wrote Bay County Circuit Court Judge Timothy Register in his order granting Mr. Geralds’ request to waive appeals. Judge Register found Mr. Geralds competent to make this decision and confirmed it was made “freely and voluntarily.” If carried out, Mr. Geralds’ execution would mark Florida’s 18th execution of 2025, a total far exceeding the state’s prior record of eight executions in one year. Mr. Geralds would also become the 171st execution volunteer since executions resumed in 1977, and the fifth volunteer of 2025.
Since 1977, execution volunteers have represented approximately 10% of all modern executions. There were four other volunteers in 2025: Aaron Gunches (AZ), James Osgood (AL), Richard Djerf (AZ), and most recently, Norman Grim (FL). Mr. Grim’s death warrant was signed despite him not having assigned counsel at the time, his previous attorney having failed to properly withdraw from his case after retiring. His new counsel was not appointed until four days after Gov. DeSantis signed the execution warrant, and Mr. Grim did not want them to file final appeals. Mr. Grim was a U.S. Navy veteran whose childhood was shaped by violence and abuse, and whose young adulthood was marked by mental illness and substance abuse. Mr. Grim was the fifth veteran Florida executed in 2025, and since his execution, two others have been executed: Bryan Jennings and Richard “Malik” Randolph. 2025 is among the deadliest year for veterans on death row, with nine veterans executed and one more scheduled for execution.
Research shows a strong correlation between volunteering for execution and mental health issues. A 2004 study by Cornell Law School Professor John Blume found that 88% of execution volunteers between 1977 and 2003 struggled with mental illness and/or substance abuse. In October 2024, DPI analyzed volunteers executed in the twenty years since Professor Blume’s study and found that among the first 165 execution volunteers, 87% had mental illness, substance abuse, or both. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, who adamantly opposed the death penalty, once called the practice of allowing mentally ill prisoners to waive their appeals and be executed “nothing less than state-administered suicide.”
Mr. Geralds was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1989 armed robbery, burglary, and murder of Tressa Pettibone in Panama City, Florida. He was initially sentenced to death in 1990, but the Florida Supreme Court vacated his death sentence while maintaining the conviction. He was sentenced to death again in 1993 and his sentence became final in 1996. In post-conviction appeals, Mr. Geralds alleged there was prosecutorial misconduct before and during his trial, that he had ineffective assistance counsel, and he raised constitutional concerns about lethal injection executions. All of these claims were denied, in addition to federal habeas relief.
In 2025, 44 people have been executed across 11 states. Florida is responsible for 17 of these executions, or 38.6%. Three more executions are scheduled in Florida and Tennessee in December 2025: Harold Nichols (12/11), Mark Geralds (12/12), and Frank Walls (12/18).
Source: Death Penalty Information Center, Hayley Bedard, November 24, 2025
"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde

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