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‘There's Never Any Closure': 20 Years After Conviction, Victim's Family Waits for Killer's Execution
News Herald ^ | December 05, 2010 | CHRIS OLWELL

Posted on 12/05/2010 9:43:02 PM PST by nickcarraway

In 1989, the murder of Tressa Pettibone hit the quiet Panama City neighborhood known as the Cove like a storm. People started locking their doors. Neighbors would call the police when strangers walked down the street until the killer was caught.

“It really turned the community upside down,” former State Attorney Jim Appleman said. “Prior to this, the Cove was a place where people walked around.”

Like a hurricane, the damage spread outward from the center, a kitchen in a house on Hollis Avenue, where an 8-year-old boy sat on the floor wiping up his dead mother’s blood.

“One person’s actions can change an entire community,” said 30-year-old Bart Pettibone, Tressa’s son. “It’s like peripheral or outer damage of a storm, when right there at the heart of it was where the most damage was done.”

****

People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.—George Orwell

The state of Florida has executed 69 prisoners since the United States Supreme Court reversed an earlier ruling and opened the door for states and the federal government to resume capital punishment in 1976. Another 393 prisoners are on death row, filing appeals or waiting for the governor to sign a death warrant.

One of them is inmate 729185, Mark Geralds.

On Feb. 7, 1990, a jury convicted Geralds of entering the Pettibone residence and beating Tressa Pettibone senseless, binding her hands and stabbing her three times in the neck. Eight of 12 jurors recommended the death penalty, which is what the judge gave him.

Since that day, the Pettibone family has been waiting for justice, through the seemingly endless appeals, worried that some judges somewhere might overturn Geralds’ sentence.

“With this, the appeals keep popping back and reopens the wounds so deep,” said Kevin Pettibone, who was Tressa’s husband. “It’s like you can’t ever get away from it. There’s never any closure.”

In September, the Florida Supreme Court upheld Geralds’ conviction and sentence, setting in motion a clemency investigation. Last month was the deadline for Tressa’s survivors to write letters to the governor’s office before a ruling on clemency. Kevin, Bart and his sister, Blythe, each wrote a letter.

The governor could sign a death warrant, but Geralds still can appeal to the federal government.

Kevin, Blythe and Bart said they want to be there when the end comes for Mark Geralds. They said they know the appeals process is important, but 20 years is too long. The average length of time an inmate spends on death row is less than 13 years.

“I believe it’s time,” said Blythe Carpenter, Bart’s sister. “I think it’s time to give our family the justice we deserve.”

****

Kevin and Tressa Pettibone had been together half their lives. They were high school sweethearts in Ohio.

It was common for Tressa to go with her husband when he left town on a job, and she begged him to bring her along on this particular trip to Cherry Hills, N.C. He turned her down.

Kevin wrestled with his guilt for about a year before one day he snapped out of it.

“It was like flipping a switch,” he said. He just decided there was nothing he could have done to protect her. Even if he hadn’t been out of town, there was no way he would have been home at 10 a.m. on a Wednesday.

About two years after Tressa’s death, Kevin remarried. He has three other children with his second wife.

But it’s been especially hard on Bart. He was so young, and to find his mother like that has scarred him permanently, Kevin said.

“It’s probably affected him more,” said Blythe Carpenter. “That’s a lot for an 8-year old to take on and I don’t think he’s ever fully gotten past it, not that he ever would have.”

****

The murder of Tressa Pettibone was particularly brutal. The stab wounds to her neck caused her to drown in her blood, which would have taken about five minutes. She didn’t bleed out. She would have been lucky to bleed out, Bart said.

“It was probably the most brutal case I’ve ever handled,” said Appleman, who was State Attorney for the 14th Judicial Circuit for more than 20 years.

The crime scene left Bart with this impression. “You could tell that the time they spent together was really violent, really beyond the scope of most people getting angry,” he said.

There was plenty of evidence to show that he had planned to kill her.

Mark Geralds had worked as a laborer at the Pettibones’ home during a remodel in 1987, so when Tressa, 14-year-old Blythe and Bart saw Geralds at the Panama City mall the week before her death, Tressa gave him a hug and treated him to a cinnamon roll.

Bart went to play games at the arcade, and after awhile Geralds came down to talk to him. He described their conversation as being like an interrogation. Geralds was asking him when he and his sister left for school in the morning and when they got home in the afternoon. Your dad is out of town for several weeks, right? When will he come home?

Bart answered the questions. Geralds learned when Tressa would be home alone and vulnerable. It didn’t seem strange at the time; now Bart is filled with deep regret.

On Feb. 1, 1989, Geralds went went to rob the Pettibones. He was looking for valuables and cash hidden in the house, but he needed someone to show him where they were. Tressa would recognize him. He brought the ties to bind her wrists.

****

It is a crippling feeling for Bart Pettibone to be at the mercy of other men.

He is waiting to see some anonymous civilian strap Geralds to a table and stick a needle in him, pump him full of sodium thiopental, pancuronium bromide and potassium chloride, “like going and putting a pet to sleep,” Bart said.

It’s not how Bart would choose to see Geralds die — he said he would prefer to do it himself in a more savage manner — but it will have to suffice. If the victims were allowed to carry out the punishment personally, the death penalty might actually be an effective deterrent, Bart said. “I would welcome the invitation,” he said. “Then he would know what it means to fear.”

The walls at the Union Correctional Institute in Raiford don’t protect society from Mark Geralds, Bart said. They protect Mark Geralds from Bart Pettibone. “Geralds is hiding in the American judicial system,” Bart said. “This is 20 years you’ve had someone turn the system on itself.”

Many death sentences are overturned on appeal. Six death row inmates have been resentenced to life so far in 2010. Thirteen more were resentenced the previous two years. For Bart, seeing Geralds resentenced to life would be the ultimate tease.

****

Between the idea and the reality, Between the motion and the act, Falls the Shadow — T.S. Elliot

The 8-year-old boy who found his mother is gone. Bart Pettibone studies prolific killers, looking for answers he never finds. Jack the Ripper, Gacy, Manson, Bundy. He is trying to figure out what allows people to act in such a way. He said he still doesn’t know.

Bart is a man now, he has a family of his own, but the things that boy saw still are with him.

Pettibone groups people into two camps: those who are with him and everyone else. He is fiercely loyal to his Cove boys, but he keeps people at arm’s length. He is slow to trust people.

He avoids talking about his mom’s death with his wife, Tiffany Ann, and their children, but not because he doesn’t trust them. He wants to keep them from his reality, to protect her. They should be allowed to keep their illusions.

At night as he falls asleep, Bart often listens to Bobby Kennedy’s remarks to Cleveland City Club on the day after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. “Whenever any American’s life is taken by another American unnecessarily…whenever we tear at the fabric of life which another man has painfully and clumsily woven together for himself and his children, the whole nation is degraded,” Kennedy said.

“It’s a beautiful idea and a beautiful dream,” Bart said, but it ultimately was unrealistic. Look how things turned out for Bobby.

Bart is fully cognizant of the contradiction. He has seen the horror of a violent death and he knows it is pointless. Violence breeds more violence, he said, and he knows watching Geralds die won’t bring his mother back. But it sure would feel good.

“I know that he’s renting space in my head,” Bart said.

Part of him envies the lawyers who work on these appeals and then move on to the next case.

“You don’t have that luxury when you’re in the eye of the storm.”

****

Experience: that most brutal of teachers. But you learn, my God do you learn. — C.S. Lewis

The way we see the world is not necessarily the way the world is. The way we see the world is an illusion we allow ourselves to believe in.

We surround ourselves with illusions: that men are civilized, trustworthy, and we are safe. We are not safe, not even in our homes, in our beds at night. Even then we are the mercy of others. At least that is what Bart Pettibone believes.

It was a conclusion Pettibone came to more than 20 years ago when he came home from school and all his illusions were destroyed. Mom was dead on the kitchen floor, blood soaked in her favorite blouse. Time slowed to a crawl but Bart’s thoughts raced through his mind, blinking, flashing.

The 8-year-old boy got a pair of scissors and tried to cut the plastic ties that bound his mother’s lifeless wrists, but the blades kept splitting.

She had been dead for hours, even an 8-year-old could tell that. He tried to move her but he wasn’t strong enough, so he sat with her for an hour or so and he talked to her. Like everything else about that day, Bart remembers what he said to her, but he keeps it to himself.


TOPICS: Local News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: florida
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1 posted on 12/05/2010 9:43:05 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

I agree with Bart, he should be able to kill the murdering a**hat in any way he thinks is appropriate. The more painful, the better.


2 posted on 12/05/2010 10:06:18 PM PST by calex59
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To: nickcarraway

O M G, how horrific.

That poor child, that poor family. I can’t imagine the pain they’ve had all these years.

I hope one day they find peace.

I don’t know what else to say. It’s so sad.


3 posted on 12/05/2010 10:11:00 PM PST by Jacktown
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To: nickcarraway
With each appeal the family of the victim has the wound reopened over and over and over again. Always reliving it. Outsiders will remember the victim from the time they died and the crime. They don't know the life and story that existed before.

I once wrote a little to the Arizona Republic (that is still in the archives,of course) that stated while the convicted gets appeal upon appeal, what second chance does the person murdered get?

I speak from experience, since my dad's name is known by many first year law students. Because of what a wonderful person he was? No. Because his murderer took his case to the USSC. Who wants that legacy?

4 posted on 12/05/2010 10:13:59 PM PST by HungarianGypsy
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To: HungarianGypsy

I know exactly how you feel. The girl that was murdered in the movie Dead Man Walking was my neighbor and my friend yet her name is never remembered. No one knows what a funny sweet girl she was and her boyfriend too.

Her killers got their names in lights. Got a movie and everything.

Makes me sick.

All these years and it still makes me angry.


5 posted on 12/05/2010 10:30:38 PM PST by Jacktown
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To: nickcarraway

The death penalty does not work. Its not justice when a killer gets to use every legal tool at his disposal to thwart it. The families of murder victims deserve closure.


6 posted on 12/05/2010 11:02:58 PM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop

If there is no death penalty, will they start ending life sentences. In some countries, the maximum sentence for any crime is ten years. That will happen here soon.


7 posted on 12/05/2010 11:17:53 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
The perp:


8 posted on 12/06/2010 12:27:27 AM PST by spetznaz (Nuclear-tipped Ballistic Missiles: The Ultimate Phallic Symbol)
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To: goldstategop
The constantly-thwarted by legal maneuvering death penalty does not work. There, I fixed it.

Meanwhile, the universe is dying of heat death faster than some 'death'-row inmates.
9 posted on 12/06/2010 12:35:00 AM PST by beezdotcom
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To: Jacktown

These are the stories that show evil working it’s way through this world. Despicable how these demons are given star status.


10 posted on 12/06/2010 12:41:01 AM PST by antceecee (Bless us Father.. have mercy on us and protect us from evil.)
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To: nickcarraway

in 1979 my cousin’s 8 year old daughter was abducted, raped and murdered by a 25 year old mechanic.
He was caught within a week, confessed his crime and announced that he enjoyed it so much that he would do it again if ever given the chance.
This creep was tried, convicted and sentenced to death in Tennessee. It took 25 years of appeals, postponements and stays of execution before he was finally put down. For my cousin, Charlotte, it was as if the state was punishing her for the entire 25 years.


11 posted on 12/06/2010 5:16:22 AM PST by BuffaloJack (The Recession is officially over. We are now into Obama's Depression.)
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To: nickcarraway
I only read the head line that was more than enough. Doesn't matter if they carry out the DP, or if the prep goes to prison for a pittance of their plea bargained sentences.

Victim's families are given a life sentence of pain. THE PAIN FOR THE VICTIM'S FAMILY NEVER GOES AWAY. My Jeremy has been gone 21 years now and the pain is always in my heart.

12 posted on 12/06/2010 7:14:22 AM PST by GailA (NO JESUS, NO CHRISTmas!)
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To: Jacktown

Long ago, I wanted to write a book about high profile (national or local) murder cases. The cases would get a couple of paragraphs overview and the stories would be about who the victims really wore. I just never knew how to go about writing such a thing.


13 posted on 12/06/2010 7:24:13 AM PST by HungarianGypsy
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To: HungarianGypsy

It’s so sad. No one knows about the victims, only how they were murdered. It’s so unfair, it breaks my heart.

If you do one day write that book, I will buy it. Count on that.


14 posted on 12/06/2010 10:02:18 AM PST by Jacktown
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To: antceecee

Yes it is. To me, it makes the hurt so much deeper.

We are a strange society. One I sometimes don’t understand.


15 posted on 12/06/2010 10:03:57 AM PST by Jacktown
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To: Jacktown

The only problem is I wouldn’t know where to start on the interview process. How to contact other families without seeming like one of the vulture media.


16 posted on 12/06/2010 2:59:30 PM PST by HungarianGypsy
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To: HungarianGypsy

You call them up and ask. You know how to talk to them. You’re one of them.

You’d be surprised how many people want their stories told.

I think it’s a wonderful idea. Handled with love, most families would not have a problem with what you want to write.

You’ll never know until you try. Give it some thought.


17 posted on 12/06/2010 9:14:38 PM PST by Jacktown
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To: Jacktown

I am considering it. I would definitely like to write something on your friend, as well, if I did this and could make a contact. It was really the where to start aspect. Do I query a publisher? Do I pick certain cases, etc.? A lot of questions, but maybe it would help my own grief a bit. This year has been harder than most. I keep telling myself it’s been 16 years. It shouldn’t feel worse than when it happened.


18 posted on 12/07/2010 9:32:08 AM PST by HungarianGypsy
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To: HungarianGypsy

The first thing I’d like an author to do is disabuse folks of this concept of “closure.” There’s no such thing, IMHO.


19 posted on 12/07/2010 9:41:33 AM PST by Cyber Liberty (We conservatives will always lose elections as long as we allow the MSM to choose our candidates.)
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To: Cyber Liberty
That is so true. When I wrote a letter to that person in 2000, I said I could deal with my dad dying in a car accident or of a heart attack, but the fact was that he had been STOLEN from me.

As I read your statement, I also thought how that part of my life has been stolen and stomped on, for good measure.

20 posted on 12/07/2010 9:59:59 AM PST by HungarianGypsy
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