Florida execution: Robert Hendrix, convicted of murdering 2, executed Weds.

Florida execution: Hendrix was convicted of the 1990 murders of Elmer and Michelle Scott at their Lake County home.

Amy Jo Smith (seated) sings with protesters to the death penalty, April 23, at the Florida State Prison near Starke, Fla., just hours before the execution of Robert Eugene Hendrix, who killed his cousin and his cousin's wife to prevent him from testifying in a burglary case against him.

Phil Sandlin/AP

April 24, 2014

Florida executed a man on Wednesday who was convicted of murdering two relatives to prevent one of them from testifying against him in a burglary trial.

Robert Hendrix was pronounced dead at 6:21 p.m. at Florida State Prison in Starke, shortly after the lethal injection procedure began. He made no final statement.

Hendrix was convicted of the 1990 murders of Elmer and Michelle Scott at their Lake County home.

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Prosecutors said Hendrix killed the couple because Elmer Scott intended to testify against him. But Hendrix's attorney said no forensic evidence links his client to the murders, and the witnesses against him were unreliable.

Hendrix was the fourth person executed in Florida this year and the 16th since Gov. Rick Scott took office in 2011.

The victims' daughter, Rachel Scott, was only 5 months old when her parents were killed. She was home in her crib but was not harmed, and said she hopes her parents are remembered for who they were as people.

"I plan on keeping them alive in my heart and suggest everyone else do the same. I will always continue to tell their story," she said.

Elmer Scott's sister, Lisa Hunt, said the execution brought a sense of relief. Lisa is also a cousin of Hendrix.

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"I feel today, as we watched my cousin die, justice, only because he is finally dead," she said.

Evidence in the case showed Hendrix shot and stabbed Scott in his trailer home the night before Hendrix's trial in the armed burglary case was to begin in August 1990. Hendrix then murdered Scott's wife, Michelle.

Scott had already made a plea deal with prosecutors in the armed burglary case in which he and Hendrix broke into a house but only Scott was caught. His cooperation led investigators to arrest Hendrix. In the weeks leading up to his trial, prosecutors say, Hendrix told friends he would kill Scott rather than return to prison

Prosecutors say that on the night of the murders, Hendrix's live-in girlfriend — Denise Turbyville — drove him from Orange County, where they lived, to the Scotts' trailer in neighboring Lake County and dropped him off.

Michelle Scott welcomed Hendrix into the trailer, and told him Elmer Scott was in the bathroom shaving and would be out shortly. When Elmer Scott came out, Hendrix asked to use the bathroom. When he left the bathroom, Hendrix fired shots at Elmer Scott and then grabbed a knife and attacked Michelle Scott, according to prosecutors.

Turbyville pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder and was sentenced to 75 years in prison. Another witness against Hendrix, Roger LaForce, was a confidential informant for a narcotics task force and stood to gain a lighter sentence for his assistance, Hendrix's attorneys say.

Hendrix attorney Harry Brody also said the presiding judge had a conflict of interest, Hendrix's trial lawyer was ineffective at presenting mitigating circumstances during sentencing and that Hendrix was shackled during his trial, leading jurors to a biased impression that he was dangerous.

During sentencing, Hendrix's attorneys failed to call witnesses who could have testified that Hendrix was regularly beaten by his father and had a serious drug addiction, factors that could explain his unbalanced mental state, according to court papers filed by Hendrix.

Earlier Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Hendrix's last-minute request for a stay without comment. He ate a last meal of pork chops, sausage gravy and biscuits, German chocolate cake and a soft drink, state corrections officials said.