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Florida serial killer died singing a hymn

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  • Florida serial killer died singing a hymn


    Louisiana cop's son Danny Harold Rolling, shown at his trial, was convicted of murdering five students.

    Danny Harold Rolling, Florida's most notorious serial killer since Ted Bundy, died singing.

    He was executed by injection Wednesday evening for the grisly murders of five college students during a 1990 spree that terrorized the college town of Gainesville, Florida.

    Rolling, 52, was pronounced dead at 6:13 p.m., said Robby Cunningham, a spokesman for the Florida Department of Corrections.

    "Mr. Rolling sang a song," he told reporters. "It was almost hymnal."

    The prisons spokesman added that he would call the hymn " 'None greater than thee, Lord' because that was the hook."

    Asked if he had any last words, Rolling said he did and then broke into the hymn, said witness Stephen Stock, of WESH-TV in Orlando.

    Although prison officials eventually turned off the sound system, Rolling continued talking and singing for about two minutes. As the chemicals took effect, his breathing became labored and stopped, Stock said.

    Relatives of Rolling's victims said they did not pay attention to his hymn.

    Rolling's killing spree began in August 1990, when he broke into three apartments in Gainesville belonging to five students.

    The bodies of Sonja Larson, 18, and Christina Powell, 17, were found at a townhouse they shared near the University of Florida campus.

    Christa Hoyt, 18, who attended a local community college, was found decapitated the next morning at her apartment. Tracy Paules and Manny Taboada, both 23, were discovered dead a day later in the apartment they shared.

    Bodies were posed


    University of Florida freshman Sonja Larson and her roommate were the spree killer's first victims.

    All were stabbed and slashed to death with a hunting knife. Three of the victims were sexually assaulted and all of the bodies were left posed; one victim's severed head was found on a shelf.


    Freshman Christina Powell and roommate Sonja Larson were stabbed and slashed with a hunting knife.

    "When these crimes happened in 1990, they were by far the most horrific thing that had happened in Gainesville and in the University of Florida community," said Bill Cervone, a prosecutor in Gainesville.

    He said he witnessed the execution, adding, "I'm not sure that the punishment fits the crime, but I do know this: Danny Rolling will never kill again."


    Hours later, police found the mutilated body of community college student and sheriff's employee Christa Hoyt.

    Diana Hoyt, Christa Hoyt's stepmother, agreed. "I'm a nurse, and I've seen my patients die," she said. "And they died a much more horrific death than what this man suffered. He relaxed and went to sleep."

    "I didn't appreciate his song," Hoyt said. "I didn't understand how he could sit there, after the horrendous crimes he committed, and talk about the angels watching over him."

    Scott Paules, Tracy Paules' brother, said that although he witnessed Rolling's execution, "I didn't spend the last 16 years thinking about him. Very rarely did I read a complete article about him. I spent my time thinking about my sister."

    Paules' sister said she was "mad all the way through" the execution. Now that Rolling is dead, she said, "I'm done with it. He's out. Finis. Gone."

    Larson's mother, Ada Larson, told CNN she still wears her daughter's high school ring. "It just warms my heart," she said. "It's a little symbol of Sonja."

    Reminders of Ted Bundy

    Rolling, a Louisiana police officer's son, pleaded guilty in 1994 to the murders, which called to mind serial killer Ted Bundy and the 1978 sorority house murders of two Florida State University students in Tallahassee. Bundy, who is believed to have killed dozens of women, died in Florida's electric chair in 1989.

    Rolling was calm and cooperative in the hours before his execution, Cunningham told The Associated Press. He spent several hours with his brother, Kevin, and his brother's pastor, the AP reported.

    The condemned man had a last meal of lobster, shrimp, baked potato, strawberry cheesecake and sweet tea.

    Rolling arrived in Gainesville on a Greyhound bus, pitched a tent in the woods near campus and set out to become, as he would say later, a "superstar" among criminals, the AP reported.

    He blamed the murders on abuse he suffered as a child and his treatment in prison, and claimed he had good and bad multiple personalities, according to the wire service.

    In a 2002 letter to the AP, Rolling wrote: "I assure you I am not a salivating ogre. Granted ... time's passed; the dark era of long ago -- Dr. Jeckle & Mr. Hyde did strike up and down the corridors of insanity."

    He told the AP he had killed one person for every year he was behind bars. He served a total of eight years in Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi before the killings.

    Source: CNN.com

  • #2
    This monster should of had his penis chopped off. I hope he's burning in hell right now.

    Comment


    • #3
      16 years?

      why does it take 10 to 20 years (or longer) to execute a death row inmate? especially if they are caught red handed so there is no doubt or they plead guilty? other countries around the world do it instantly. we waste entirely too much tax-payer money keeping them alive in prison.

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      • #4
        THE DEVIL KNOWS HOW TO DECEIVE!!!

        Originally posted by Kellie-Girl View Post
        This monster should of had his penis chopped off. I hope he's burning in hell right now.
        After that feet first through a wood chipper would be fitting.

        He sings a hymn of God when he is dying? This Devil will burn in Hell surely as he tries to deceive people left here on Earth. Just like that scumbag Terry Dodd many years ago who raped and hung that 4 year old little boy in the closet. He kept a diary of his victims, so he could later fantasize about them while he you know what...he admitted to that. He wrote how that little boy hung in the closet and wiggled, urinating all over himself, while he tried to live, or should I say...a Devil was taking his life?!

        It brings tears to my eyes there is such evil in this world. Then, before they execute him he claims he found Jesus. Bullcrap!

        Comment


        • #5
          I will never understand why justice isn't swift.......the appeal process should end after 1 year and those receiving the death penalty should be put to death within 30 days of that 1 year to appeal. Instead, jails are overcrowded, and it costs thousands per year to house, clothe and feed those we are killing anyway! Craziness, I tell you!

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          • #6
            The death penalty just goes to show what a barbaric society we have become!! It is obvious that this guy was mentally ill! The death penalty does NOT deter murder! Blood for blood only begets MORE blood!

            Comment


            • #7
              Executed Killer Confessed to Three Other Murders

              Shortly before his execution for the murder of five Florida college students, serial killer Danny Rolling handed his spiritual adviser a handwritten confession to a grisly triple murder 17 years ago in his hometown of Shreveport, police said Friday.

              "I, and I alone am guilty," said the one-page note. "It was my hand that took those precious lights out of this ole dark world. With all my heart & soul would I could bring them back."

              Rolling, the son of a Shreveport police officer, was executed Wednesday for killing five college students in Gainesville, Fla., in a ghastly string of slayings in 1990.

              Police have long suspected that Rolling stabbed 55-year-old William T. Grissom, his 24-year-old daughter Julie and 8-year-old grandson Sean as they got ready for dinner on Nov. 4, 1989, in Grissom's home.

              In 1997, Rolling sent a detailed confession, including a description of the crime scene, to the woman he had married in prison. She gave it to police, said retired police detectives Don Ashley and Danny Fogger, who had worked on the case.

              Since Rolling had pleaded guilty in Florida and his execution was expected, Louisiana authorities saw little reason to try him.

              Still, police said it was a relief to have a signed, public confession.

              The Rev. Mike Hudspeth said that during a two-hour visit Tuesday, Rolling told him that he had killed the Grissoms and would give the minister a written confession the following day.

              The document was released at a news conference Friday. Most of the text is in cursive, with large, gothic-style capitals at the start of each paragraph.

              "I witnessed his execution and it was nothing compared to what he put his victims through," Julie Grissom's mother, Joyce Burton, said in a written statement. "At least I can get up knowing he's not breathing the air that our children should still be breathing."

              Source: AP

              Comment


              • #8
                Man some people are just F--ked up

                Comment

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