In 1988, Marshall Lee Gore raped, strangled, and stabbed a 30-year-old victim, then dumped her body into a Miami trash heap. He was also found to have killed another young woman, whose body was found months later. Gore was sentenced to die for his crime, and the execution was scheduled for yesterday.
But the state of Florida did not kill Gore as planned. The reason why might surprise you.
There is no graver responsibility and act of state government than an execution. In Florida this week, a campaign fundraiser takes precedence.
Attorney General Pam Bondi persuaded Gov. Rick Scott to postpone an execution scheduled for [Tuesday night] because it conflicted with her re-election kick-off reception.
“What’s going on down there? It’s ridiculous,” said Phyllis Novick, the Ohio mother of one of Marshall Lee Gore’s victims, when told Monday about the reason for the delay.
Sure, it’s important when a state is prepared to kill one of its own citizens, but (a) re-election kick-off receptions only happen once every four years; and (b) this is Florida, where things are a little … different.









