On February 10 (date provided by the user), 1980, Theodore Robert Bundy was sentenced to death in Leon County, Florida, following his conviction for the July 1978 murders of two Florida State University students, Margaret Bowman and Lisa Levy. The sentence represented the culmination of a high-profile trial that followed Bundy’s arrest in Florida after years of criminal activity, escapes, and prosecutions in multiple states. Bundy had been captured in 1978 and linked to a sequence of violent crimes that spanned several states during the 1970s. In Florida, he was tried for the attacks at the Chi Omega sorority house in Tallahassee on January 15, 1978, which left two women dead (Bowman and Levy) and two others seriously injured. The Florida trial focused on those specific murders and several related counts. Prosecutors presented forensic evidence, witness testimony, and accounts tying Bundy to the scene and the victims. Defense efforts included challenging the evidence and Bundy’s own courtroom behavior, which at times drew public and media attention. The jury returned verdicts of guilt on the murder charges, and the sentencing phase resulted in a death sentence under Florida law. Bundy’s conviction and sentence were significant both legally and culturally: legally because they secured capital punishment for crimes that had horrified local communities and connected to a broader pattern of interstate violence; culturally because media coverage and Bundy’s own notoriety amplified public interest in his personality, methods, and history. Bundy’s legal saga did not end with this sentence. He faced additional prosecutions and appeals in Florida and other states. He also escaped custody twice in 1977, committing further crimes before being recaptured. His appeals and motions for retrial were pursued over subsequent years by defense attorneys, and he continued to receive extensive media attention. Bundy was ultimately executed in the electric chair at Florida State Prison on January 24, 1989, after exhausting his appeals and post-conviction remedies. Historical accounts of Bundy’s crimes, trials, and execution are based on court records, contemporaneous reporting, and later investigative work. Some details of Bundy’s full victim count remain disputed; Bundy confessed to 30 homicides shortly before his execution, but investigators and researchers have considered both higher and lower estimates based on linking evidence and missing-person cases. Where specifics remain uncertain or contested, official court documents and verified investigative reports are the primary sources for the Florida trial and sentence described here.