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Gerald Stano
Stano in a 1980 police mugshot
Born
Paul Zeininger

(1951-09-12)September 12, 1951
DiedMarch 23, 1998(1998-03-23) (aged 46)
Cause of death Execution by electrocution
Conviction(s) First degree murder (9 counts)
Criminal penalty Death plus 8 life sentences
Details
Victims22 confirmed
41 claimed
88 suspected
Span of crimes
1969–1980
CountryUnited States
State(s) Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania
Date apprehended
April 1980
Imprisoned at Florida State Prison

Gerald Eugene Stano (born Paul Zeininger; September 12, 1951 – March 23, 1998) was an American convicted serial killer. Stano murdered at least 22 young women and girls, confessed to 41 murders and the police say the number of his victims may be closer to 88.

Early life

Stano was born as Paul Zeininger on September 12, 1951, in Schenectady, New York, the fifth child born to his mother, and the third she put up for adoption. [1] [2] His biological mother neglected him to such an extent that when she gave him up for adoption at six months old, county doctors declared that he could not be adopted. They said Zeininger was functioning at "an animalistic level", even eating his own faeces to survive. Zeininger had four biological siblings who were given up for adoption. A nurse named Norma Stano eventually adopted Zeininger and legally changed his name.

Despite his foster parents being described as loving, Stano continued to have behavioral problems. He was a bed wetter until the age of 10. [2] In school, he earned Cs and Ds in all subjects except music at which he excelled. He lied compulsively, and was once caught stealing money from his father's wallet to pay members of the track and field team to finish behind him, so he would not be viewed as a complete failure. During his youth, Stano was often bullied. At the age of 14, he was arrested for a false fire alarm and later for throwing rocks at cars from a highway bridge. Stano did not graduate high school until he was 21. After receiving his diploma, he enrolled in a computer school, graduated and began working in a local hospital. Soon after, he was fired for stealing from co-workers. After moving with his parents to Ormond Beach, Florida, he was fired from one job after another, mostly for theft or tardiness. [2] He also once impregnated a mentally disabled girl. Stano's parents paid for her abortion.

Murders

Stano was arrested on March 25, 1980, after attacking a woman named Donna Hensley, who escaped a hotel room and contacted authorities. Hensley told police that she was a prostitute, and had been approached by a man requesting her services. Once at her motel room, the two began to argue and the man ended up stabbing her thirty times with a knife before insulting her and fleeing. Stano was known to Hensley and local sex workers, and she was able to identify him to authorities. [3]

Officially, Stano admitted that he began killing in the early 1970s, when he was in his twenties; however, he also claimed to have begun killing in the late 1960s, at the age of 18. Several girls had gone missing in Stano's area of residence at that time, but insufficient physical evidence was found when these claims were investigated almost twenty years later, and Stano was never charged. He was most active in Florida and New Jersey. Stano admitted to committing his first murder in New Jersey in 1969. He also confessed to having killed six other women in Pennsylvania. After moving to Florida, he may have murdered 30 or more women. Most of Stano's victims were women in vulnerable circumstances, all except two were Caucasian and most of his known victims were between the ages of 16 and 25. By his twenty-ninth birthday, Stano was in prison for allegedly murdering 41 women. He was housed with fellow serial killer Ted Bundy until the latter's execution in 1989. [4]

Victims

Stano admitted to several murders across Florida from 1973 to 1980. [5]

  • The bodies of Janine Marie Ligotino, 19, and Ann Eugenia Arceneaux, 17, were discovered stabbed to death in a vacant lot in Gainesville, Florida on March 21, 1973. [6]
  • Barbara Anne Bauer, 16, was found on September 6, 1973, in Bradford County, Florida. She had been strangled to death and had been abducted from a Holly Hill shopping mall. [6]
  • Cathy Lee Scharf, 17, was a hitchhiker from Port Orange whose body was found on January 19, 1974, by hunters in the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge near Titusville, Florida. [6] She had been fatally stabbed and strangled between December 1973 and January 1974. [7]
  • On November 24, 1974, a woman's decomposed body was found lying face-down on an embankment about 50 feet behind the Interstate Mall in Altamonte, Florida. It was determined she had been killed in the same spot that her body was dumped. [8] She had been stabbed twice and was possibly sexually assaulted, as her underwear was pulled down and her shirt was pulled up. In 1982, Stano confessed to her murder. He said he had picked her up while she was hitchhiking on the Interstate 4, had argued with her and ended up murdering her. She remains unidentified and is known as the Seminole County Jane Doe. [9]
  • On January 2, 1975, the body of Nancy Jean Heard, 24, was found near Bulow Creek Road, just north of Ormond Beach. [10] Her strangled body was posed and covered with tree branches. She was last seen hitchhiking on Atlantic Avenue.
  • Diana Lynn Valleck, 18, was found on May 19, 1975, in an empty lot in Wesley Chapel, Florida, at the intersection of State Road 54 and Livingston Road. She had been shot to death.
  • Susan Basille, 12, was last seen in Port Orange, Florida on June 10, 1975. [11] According to Stano's 1982 confession, he picked her up as she exited a school bus after enticing her with a ride to the Starlite Skate Center on South Nova Road. Instead, he strangled her and left her body in a patch of woods, covered with palm fronds. Her body was never found and the site has since been built over. [12]
  • On July 22, 1975, a fisherman discovered the body of 16-year-old Linda Ann Hamilton strangled, drowned and buried in the sand of a beach near Turtle Mound State Park in New Smyrna Beach, Florida. [10] She was last seen walking down Atlantic Avenue.
  • Twenty-one year-old Emily Branch's strangled body was found floating in Spruce Spring Creek in December 1975. She had been murdered earlier that month in Florida. Stano confessed to her murder among many others in 1982.
  • Susan Bickrest, 24, was an aspiring cosmetologist who had just moved to Daytona Beach from Ohio and was kidnapped by Stano from her place of work on December 20, 1975. [6]
  • Thirty-five year-old Bonnie Williams Hughes was found on February 11, 1976, approximately 200 yards south of CR 546, near the intersection of 546 and U.S. Highway 27. She had been beaten about her head and face. Her 1974 brown and gold Cadillac sedan was found 50 feet from her body. She was deaf in both ears, and was last seen at an oyster bar in Winter Haven with an unknown white male.
  • Ramona Cheryl Neal, 18, was found in Tomoka State Park on May 29, 1976. [10] Her body had been concealed with branches.
  • Victims 18-year-old Joan Gail Foster and 39-year-old Emily Grieve were both found on September 28, 1977, and October 21, 1977, respectively in Pasco County, Florida. Both had been shot multiple times.
  • On October 28, 1977, 23-year-old Phoebe Winston was reported missing from her home in Plant City, Florida. She was last seen driving a 1964 light blue Ford 4-door sedan, which was recovered on March 3, 1978, off Cleveland Heights Boulevard in Lakeland. On March 27, 1979, her skeletal remains were found in an open field northeast of Cleveland Heights Boulevard and Rolling Woods Lane in Lakeland. She had been shot in the head. [13]
  • Kathleen Mary Muldoon, 23, was in her third semester of woodworking classes at Daytona Beach Community College. [6] A school acquaintance gave her a ride to a restaurant on November 11, 1977. Her body was later found in a drainage ditch. She had been beaten and shot.
  • Thirty-five year-old Sandra DuBose was discovered on a deserted road near Daytona Beach in Brevard County on August 5, 1978. She had been shot to death.
  • Sixteen year-old Christine Goodson was found dead on April 15, 1979, in Pinellas County, Florida. Her cause of death has not been publicly revealed.
  • Seventeen year-old Dorothy Williams was discovered stabbed and beaten to death behind the Holiday Inn on North Dale Mabry Highway in Tampa, Florida
  • On December 12, 1979. Mary Carol Maher, 20, was abducted on January 27, 1980, near the Daytona Beach Boardwalk and was stabbed to death. [14]
  • On April 15, 1980, a boy in Holly Hill, near Daytona Beach, discovered a human skull in a wooded area at the end of Primrose Lane. The boy took the skull home in a bag and showed it to his parents, who called the Sheriff's office. Investigators scoured the area for days, and eventually found more remains, mostly skeletonised, and some pieces of clothing. Apparently wild animals had pulled the corpse apart and scattered it. An autopsy later identified the victim as 26-year-old prostitute Toni Van Haddocks. Her cause of death was attributed to multiple stab wounds to the head. [10]
  • A young woman's remains were found in Daytona Beach, Florida on November 5, 1980, by Florida Department of Transportation workers who found the victim's skeletal remains in the wooded median strip of Interstate-95, north of the Volusia/Brevard County line. [15] She had been murdered several weeks before and died due to stab wounds in her upper torso. Stano told investigators the woman was a prostitute he met on Main Street in 1978 or 1979. He said he choked her to death and took her to the wooded area. [16] Years later, he remembered the slogan on her shirt, "Do it in the dirt," an advertising slogan for a motorcycle manufacturer. No charges were filed in accordance with a plea agreement. [17] The woman remains unidentified and she is referred to by authorities as the Daytona Beach Jane Doe.

Execution

Stano was found guilty of nine murders and received eight life sentences and one death sentence, the latter of which was carried out by electric chair on March 23, 1998, in Florida State Prison. For his final meal, Stano requested Delmonico steak, a baked potato with sour cream and bacon bits, salad with blue cheese dressing, lima beans, a half gallon of mint chocolate-chip ice cream, and 2 litres of Pepsi. [18] Stano's final statement proclaimed innocence and directed blame for his false confessions at the lead investigator, Paul Crow. He stated: "I am innocent. I am frightened. I was threatened, and I was held month after month without any real legal representation. I confessed to crimes I did not commit." [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Serial killer Gerald Stano of Ormond was executed 20 years ago". The Daytona Beach News-Journal. January 16, 2019. Archived from the original on January 17, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d Lohr, David. "Gerald Eugene Stano". Crime Library. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  3. ^ 1998: Gerald Eugene Stano, misogynist psychopath Retrieved on January 30, 2018
  4. ^ "Bodies kept mounting in case of serial killer Gerald Stano". Jacksonville News. January 16, 2019.
  5. ^ "Victims Stano confessed to killing". Florida Today. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e Odyssey of Murder April 23, 2023 by the Crime Library.
  7. ^ "Gerald Eugene Stano" (PDF). maamodt.asp.radford.edu. p. 1. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  8. ^ "#UP1337". NamUs. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  9. ^ "658UFFL". Doe Network. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d Death Journey April 23, 2023 by the Crime Library.
  11. ^ "2547DFFL". Doe Network. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  12. ^ "Susan Basile". The Charley Project. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  13. ^ "Cold Case: Phoebe Winston Found in an Open Field". The Free Press. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  14. ^ "Gerald Eugene Stano" (PDF). maamodt.asp.radford.edu. p. 2. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  15. ^ "#UP724". NamUs. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  16. ^ "382UFFL". The Doe Network. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  17. ^ "Jane Doe 1980". National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  18. ^ Michael Griffin (March 23, 1998). "Execution flurry begins". The Orlando Sentinel. p. 1. Retrieved July 27, 2017 – via newspapers.com. Closed access icon

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