Amber Wright and Kyle Hooper On May 30, 2014, the Florida 5th District Court of Appeal allowed the appeals of both Kyle Hooper and Amber Wright, vacating the former's life sentence in favour of a re-sentencing hearing while ordering a re-trial for the latter. The court found that Wright should be re-tried due the police's failure to advise her of her Miranda rights. As for Hooper, the court found that the sentencing had to conform with the guidelines required to sentence juveniles to life, where they were entitled to the possibility of parole. On January 14, 2016, following a re-trial before another jury, Wright was found guilty once again for the first-degree murder of Seath Jackson. On February 23, 2016, Wright was once again sentenced to life in prison, but was entitled to the possibility of parole after serving 25 years of her life sentence. On December 8, 2016, circuit Judge Anthony Tatti sentenced Hooper to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after 25 years. As of 2025, following their re-sentencing hearings, Wright is detained at the Homestead Correctional Institution,
Michael Bargo Jr. As of his sentencing in December 2013, Michael Shane Bargo Jr. was one of eight prisoners incarcerated on
Florida's death row for murders committed in
Marion County.
First appeal and vacatur of death sentence In December 2014, Bargo filed an appeal to the
Florida Supreme Court, seeking to overturn his murder conviction and death sentence. On June 29, 2017, the Florida Supreme Court allowed Michael Bargo's appeal against his death sentence, overturned it, and ordered Bargo to undergo a re-sentencing trial. The court's decision was made in light of the 2017 reforms to Florida's death penalty laws, which decreed that death sentences could only be issued based on unanimous jury verdicts, thus overturning the state's previous requisite of non-unanimous death penalty verdicts by the jury (at least seven jurors were needed to agree on a death sentence). This new law, however, was only in effect for roughly six years, as in April 2023, Florida's statutes were once again reformed to allow the death penalty if at least eight out of twelve jurors voted in favor. This reform was partly due to mass shooter
Nikolas Cruz escaping the death penalty for murdering 17 students and school staff members during
a 2018 school shooting, after which the jury failed to unanimously agree on a death sentence.
Re-sentencing On April 3, 2019, Bargo's re-sentencing trial began before another jury, and the prosecution once again sought the death penalty for Bargo. On April 10, 2019, the jury unanimously recommended Bargo to be sentenced to death for murdering Jackson. On September 12, 2019, circuit Judge Anthony Tatti formally reinstated the death penalty for Bargo.
Further appeals On June 24, 2021, Bargo's second appeal against his death sentence was denied by the Florida Supreme Court. As of 2021, Bargo is awaiting execution at the
Union Correctional Institution. ==Aftermath==