TALLAHASSEE — In what could be Florida’s 17th execution this year, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday signed a death warrant for a man convicted of raping and murdering a Putnam County convenience-store manager in 1988.
Richard Barry Randolph, 63, is scheduled to be executed Nov. 20 for the murder of Minnie Ruth McCollum, who was beaten, stabbed and raped at a Handy Way store in East Palatka. Randolph was a former employee of the store, and McCollum interrupted him as he tried to steal money or lottery tickets, according to a 1989 sentencing order issued by then-Circuit Judge Robert Perry.
“When Minnie Ruth McCollum interrupted the defendant in the process of stealing from the store, he brutally beat her about the head with his hands and fists, kicked her, strangled her with a ligature and stabbed her with a knife, inflicting wounds which medical evidence showed caused her death on August 21, 1988,” Perry wrote. “The defendant went back to the victim on four or five separate occasions while trying to murder her. His statements reflect that she was much tougher than he thought and that he had to repeat the beatings and/or strangulations.”
Randolph took McCollum’s car and cashed stolen lottery tickets elsewhere, according to the sentencing order.
If the death warrant is carried out, it would add to a record for executions in a year in Florida — and could continue a recent pace of two executions a month. DeSantis on Oct. 10 signed a death warrant for Bryan Frederick Jennings, 66, to be executed Nov. 13 in the 1979 kidnapping, rape and murder of a 6-year-old girl in Brevard County.
The state on Oct. 28 is scheduled to execute Norman Grim, 65, in the 1998 murder of a Santa Rosa County woman. Samuel Smithers, 72, was put to death by lethal injection Oct. 14 in the 1996 murders of two women in Hillsborough County.
Florida also carried out two executions in May, two in June, two in July, two in August and two in September.
Richard B. Randolph is scheduled to be executed on Nov. 20, 2025, after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed his death warrant. (Florida Department of Corrections/Courtesy)
DeSantis has said little publicly about the rapid pace of executions, but the previous modern-era record in a year was eight in 1984 and 2014. The modern era represents the time since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, after a 1972 U.S. Supreme Court ruling halted it.
Typically, the signing of a death warrant begins a flurry of legal activity about whether the execution should be carried out.
In addition to Smithers, inmates executed this year were Victor Jones on Sept. 30; David Pittman on Sept. 17; Curtis Windom on Aug. 28; Kayle Bates on Aug. 19; Edward Zakrzewski on July 31; Michael Bell on July 15; Thomas Gudinas on June 24; Anthony Wainwright on June 10; Glen Rogers on May 15; Jeffrey Hutchinson on May 1; Michael Tanzi on April 8; Edward James on March 20; and James Ford on Feb. 13.