Ocala County Judge Anthony Tatti formalised Michael Jones' fate at the court hearing after a jury recommended the death penalty in a January sentencing trial.
A lawyer for the five-time murderer said he intends to appeal the sentence.

The July 2019 deaths were triggered after Jones’ wife, Casei Jones, accused him of cheating on her after she checked his phone.

Jones
later told police that his wife raised a bat during a vicious fight
inside their home and that he bludgeoned her to death with the weapon
while angry.
The four young children, two of whom he shared with his spouse — were asleep during the beating and did not wake up.
Jones
told investigators he wrapped his wife’s corpse in blankets, stuffed it
in a tote bag, and placed it in a closet in their home.
While in panic, he then used her cell phone to post items on her social media accounts to conceal her death.

Jones
took his two stepchildren, Preston Bowers, 4, and Cameron Bowers, 8, to
stay with their dad and dropped off his own children, Mercalli Jones,
2, and Alyana Jones, 11 months, at their grandmother’s home.
With summer break about to end, Jones worried the kids’ absence from school would raise suspicions.

A week before Cameron was slated to resume school, Jones pulled him out of bed as he slept and strangled him on a bedroom floor before putting his body in a suitcase.
Jones told police he choked Preston with a zip tie the next day before drowning him in a bathtub.
He also placed his body in a suitcase.
Several days later, Jones said he pulled up to a local police precinct with his two daughters and considered turning himself in for the three murders.
But he backed out of that plan, opting instead to drown the toddlers in a bathtub.
“I
don’t know, just everything mounted up and it seemed like the way out,”
Jones told police after his arrest, according to police documents.
He was ultimately arrested in September 2019 after crashing his car in a minor accident.
An officer was overwhelmed with a strong smell from Jones’ car and found Casei Jones’ body in the rear of his minivan.
He later led cops to the bodies of the four children in a nearby wooded area.
Jones
pleaded guilty last November, but his lawyers highlighted his
dysfunctional childhood in pushing for a life term rather than the death
sentence.
They told jurors Jones was molested by his father
and beaten by his stepfather and that he would hear voices that
commanded him to commit criminal acts.
A jury rejected the arguments and recommended he be executed.
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