Thirty Years of Waiting: The Final Chapter of Andrew Richard Lukart and the Tragic Murder of Baby Gabrielle

Justice is often described as a slow, methodical process, a pendulum that swings with deliberate patience. But for the family of a five-month-old baby girl whose life was violently stolen, the wait for closure has been a grueling marathon stretching across nearly three decades. On a quiet Tuesday evening, June 2, 2026, the state of Florida finally carried out the ultimate sentence, closing the book on one of the most heartbreaking and deeply disturbing crimes in the state’s history. Andrew Richard Lukart, a man who spent twenty-nine years on death row, was executed by lethal injection for the brutal murder of his ex-girlfriend’s infant daughter.
To truly grasp the magnitude of this tragedy and how such a horrific event could unfold, we have to look back at the origins of the man responsible. Born in 1973 in Pennsylvania, Andrew Richard Lukart’s life began in shadows. Court records paint a grim picture of a deeply dysfunctional family environment, one marred by extreme hardship. From a very young age, Lukart was subjected to severe physical and sexual abuse at the hands of a maternal uncle. While no amount of childhood trauma can ever excuse the taking of an innocent life, these early experiences undeniably fractured his psychological foundation. By the early 1990s, the weight of this unresolved trauma became impossible to ignore. A mental health clinic formally evaluated him and urgently recommended specialized psychiatric treatment. He was placed in a main youth center where he grappled with various severe mental health disorders for a period of time.
Eventually, Lukart aged out of the institution and attempted to build a normal life. He found his way into the construction industry, working long, grueling hours as a laborer and warehouse worker. Seeking a fresh start, he packed his bags and relocated to the sun-drenched city of Jacksonville, Florida. It was a chance to begin a new chapter, to leave the darkness of his past behind. But the demons he carried were merely dormant, waiting for a trigger.
Roughly two years before the crime that would ultimately seal his fate, Lukart entered into a romantic relationship with a woman in Jacksonville and moved into her home. The household included Jillian French, the woman’s eight-month-old daughter. From the outside, it might have looked like a newly formed family, but behind closed doors, the relationship was a powder keg of constant arguments and escalating conflicts. During one of these heated episodes, the unimaginable happened. Lukart unleashed a wave of unhinged violence on little Jillian. The assault left the infant with catastrophic injuries, including multiple fractured ribs, bilateral retinal hemorrhaging, and a severe traumatic brain injury that nearly claimed her life.
Faced with the undeniable evidence of his brutality, Lukart pleaded guilty to the assault. He admitted full responsibility for nearly killing the infant. In a decision that would later haunt the community and the judicial system, the court showed an astonishing level of leniency. Despite the devastating severity of Jillian’s injuries, Lukart was not handed a lengthy prison sentence. Instead, he walked away with probation. It was a catastrophic failure of the justice system, a missed opportunity to keep a dangerously violent man off the streets. This single decision set the stage for a much greater tragedy.
Fast forward to 1996. Lukart, now a free man with a violent past buried beneath a calm exterior, began a new relationship with a woman named Misty Ru. Misty was a loving mother to two young daughters: two-year-old Ashley and five-month-old Gabrielle Hansshaw. Completely unaware of the monster lurking behind Lukart’s friendly smile, and oblivious to his prior conviction for brutally assaulting a baby, Misty welcomed him into her life. He moved into her Jacksonville home, a house she shared with her father and uncle. To everyone in the family, Lukart appeared to be a kind, affectionate, and trustworthy partner. There were no raised voices, no flashes of anger, and absolutely no warning signs of the violence that was about to erupt.
The afternoon of February 25, 1996, began like any ordinary Sunday. Around 5:00 PM, Misty and Lukart returned home after running a few mundane errands around the city. Exhausted from the day, Misty decided to lay little Ashley down for a nap in one of the bedrooms. While she focused on putting her toddler to sleep, Lukart stayed in another part of the house, keeping an eye on baby Gabrielle. For several peaceful minutes, everything felt perfect. Through the walls, Misty could hear the sweet sound of Gabrielle laughing. She could hear Lukart playing with her, his voice soft and affectionate. It was a picture of domestic bliss.
But within moments, that comforting illusion was shattered.
Lukart suddenly appeared in the bedroom where Misty was tending to Ashley. He was clutching a diaper, and his entire demeanor had shifted. He was visibly irritated, his voice clipped as he told Misty that Gabrielle needed a diaper change before abruptly turning on his heel and marching back to the baby. He placed Gabrielle on the floor of one of the rooms to change her.
According to the statements he would later give, the five-month-old baby was squirming. She wouldn’t stay still. For a man carrying deep-seated psychological issues and a history of explosive violence, this minor, everyday frustration was the spark that ignited a fatal rage. In a sudden, incomprehensible fit of fury, Lukart brutally attacked the defenseless infant. The transition from a laughing, affectionate caregiver to a violent aggressor happened in the blink of an eye. The injuries Gabrielle sustained in those few horrific moments were absolutely devastating, sealing the tragic fate of a child whose life had barely begun.
Back in the other bedroom, Misty had finally coaxed Ashley to sleep. The house was quiet, save for the sudden, startling sound of a car engine roaring to life outside. Peeking out the window, Misty felt a knot of confusion form in her stomach. It was her own vehicle, and Andrew was behind the wheel, speeding away from the house without a word of explanation. Bewildered and growing anxious, Misty hurried into the room where she had left her baby.
The room was completely empty. Gabrielle was gone.
Panic set in instantly. For thirty agonizing minutes, Misty searched, her heart pounding with a terror only a mother could understand. Then, the phone rang. It was Lukart, calling from a local convenience store. His voice was frantic as he spun a wild, terrifying tale. He claimed that a strange man had broken into the house, snatched Gabrielle, and fled in a pickup truck. He told Misty that he had jumped into her car and chased the kidnapper, but had ultimately lost him. Before abruptly hanging up, he ordered her to call the police immediately.
Law enforcement descended on the Jacksonville area, launching a massive, desperate search for the missing infant. But seasoned detectives possess an instinct for deception, and from the very start, Lukart’s dramatic kidnapping story didn’t sit right with them. He was immediately classified as a person of interest.
The first crack in his story appeared just hours later. In a bizarre twist, an off-duty Florida Highway Patrol officer spotted Lukart trespassing on his rural property. Recognizing his suspicious behavior, the trooper detained him and immediately contacted the search teams. Almost simultaneously, investigators stumbled upon Misty’s missing car. It had been abandoned in a roadside ditch after an apparent crash, and the vehicle was completely empty.
As search and rescue teams scoured the dense woods and surrounding areas, clinging to the fading hope of finding Gabrielle alive, detectives attempted to question Lukart. Handcuffed beside a patrol car, he was tight-lipped, refusing to answer questions and demanding an attorney. But as he stood there, surrounded by the flashing lights of police cruisers, several officers heard him quietly mutter a phrase that sent chills down their spines: “I wish she hadn’t messed her diaper.”
It was a slip of the tongue that obliterated his kidnapping narrative. Brought into the interrogation room, Lukart stubbornly clung to his fabricated story about the mysterious man in the pickup truck. The detectives weren’t buying a word of it. In a calculated move, they placed a photograph of smiling baby Gabrielle directly in front of him on the table. The reaction was immediate and visceral. Lukart became visibly agitated, aggressively pushing the photo away and demanding they remove it from his sight.
Under the crushing weight of police pressure, the dam finally broke. Lukart confessed that the kidnapping story was a complete lie. He admitted to causing the baby’s death, though he cowardly attempted to minimize his actions. He claimed it was a tragic accident—that while holding her to change her diaper, she squirmed, and he simply dropped her, causing her head to strike the floor. Following his confession, he led the somber investigation team to the location where he had discarded Gabrielle’s body. The heartbreaking discovery confirmed the worst: the baby was found still wearing the soiled diaper that had provoked his deadly rage.
The ensuing trial was a harrowing ordeal for Gabrielle’s grieving family. The medical examiner took the stand and systematically dismantled Lukart’s “accidental drop” defense. The jury was shown undeniable medical evidence that the catastrophic injuries inflicted on the infant were entirely inconsistent with a simple fall. Furthermore, prosecutors brought Lukart’s dark past into the light, using his 1994 conviction for severe child abuse as a powerful aggravating factor.
The community’s outrage was palpable. Gabrielle’s grandfather, representing a family shattered by grief, addressed the court and the public with raw emotion, describing Lukart as an “evil, twisted-minded, sadistic person, some animal.” When asked if he wanted the death penalty, his answer was absolute: “Yes. He killed my baby.” Lukart, on the other hand, displayed a chilling indifference. When asked by reporters if he was worried about receiving the death penalty, he simply replied, “Nope.”
On April 4, 1997, the jury returned their verdict: guilty of first-degree murder and aggravated child abuse. Andrew Richard Lukart was sentenced to death.
But a death sentence is rarely the end of the story. For nearly 29 years, Lukart sat on Florida’s death row, utilizing every available legal avenue to delay his fate. His defense team filed a relentless barrage of appeals in both state and federal courts. They argued heavily on a technicality that would later become a massive point of contention in Florida’s judicial system: the jury that recommended his death sentence had not reached a unanimous verdict. Furthermore, his attorneys pleaded that Lukart had expressed genuine remorse for his actions over the years, a factor they believed warranted a reduction of his sentence.
For three decades, the courts meticulously reviewed every motion, every appeal, and every argument presented by the defense. And time after time, they arrived at the exact same conclusion. The murder conviction and the death sentence were repeatedly upheld. The judicial system, which had failed to protect children from Lukart in the past, stood firm in its final judgment.
The long wait finally ended in May 2026, when Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed the death warrant, scheduling the execution for June 2.
The final day of Andrew Richard Lukart’s life unfolded with an eerie calm. He woke up in his cell at 7:00 AM, took a shower, and went about his morning without incident. Unlike many inmates facing execution, he declined the option of a special last meal, settling instead for the standard prison menu. He received no friends or family for final visits, spending time only with a spiritual adviser early in the day.
As the afternoon waned, the reality of his impending death seemed to finally take hold. At 5:00 PM, he was transferred to an isolation cell adjacent to the execution chamber. Reports indicate that he became uncooperative with the prison staff, requiring guards to administer a light sedative to manage him. By 6:00 PM, the resistance had faded, and he was escorted into the execution chamber.
Strapped to the gurney, staring up at the ceiling, the 53-year-old was given one final opportunity to speak. The warden leaned in and asked if he had any last words. Lukart slowly raised his head. He looked directly through the glass at the group seated in the front row of the witness room—the surviving members of Gabrielle’s family, who had waited twenty-nine years for this exact moment.
Looking at the family he had destroyed, he offered two simple words: “I’m sorry.”
At 6:19 PM, after receiving a lethal injection consisting of three fatal drugs, Andrew Richard Lukart was pronounced dead. Witnesses reported that the procedure went smoothly, with no visible signs of physical suffering on his part.
The execution closes a dark, painful chapter in Florida’s legal history. It brings a definitive end to the life of a man whose inability to control his violent impulses cost an innocent baby her life. But it also leaves us with profound questions about the nature of our justice system. A family waited almost thirty years to see a sentence carried out. The community is left to wonder if the tragedy could have been prevented entirely had the courts handed down a harsher punishment for his first offense. While the state has finally delivered its ultimate penalty, the memories of a smiling five-month-old girl, and the devastating silence she left behind, will echo far longer than the final words of the man who took her away.