SUNRISE, Fla. (AP/WSVN) — Police have charged a convicted murderer who was released from prison last year with the slaying of a South Florida woman whose body was found in a canal after being missing for three weeks.

Eric Pierson, 54, was charged Saturday with first-degree murder for the slaying of Erika Verdecia, 33, hours after her body was found Saturday in Davie.

Sunrise police say Pierson confessed to stabbing the single mother four times with a screwdriver on Sept. 25.

Pierson had been released from prison in September 2020 after serving 27 years of a 40-year sentence for the 1993 beating and strangulation murder of 17-year-old Kristina Whitaker, whose death helped galvanize a push for longer prison sentences. He had pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.

Florida did away with parole after the slaying, requiring convicts to serve at least 85% of their sentences. But the change could not be applied retroactively and Pierson was still eligible, leading to last year’s release.

In 1985, Pierson had broken into a home and slit a woman’s throat. He served four years of an 18-year sentence for first-degree attempted murder before being paroled.

Verdecia’s mother told the South Florida SunSentinel she doesn’t understand why Pierson was free to attack her daughter. Erika Verdecia leaves behind a 6-year-old daughter.

“Why is this guy in the streets? Why?” Carmen Verdecia told the newspaper. “He’s going to pay this time. We’re not going to stop until we see him in the electric chair.”

Carmen and other family members spoke with reporters on Sunday.

“My sister did not deserve to die like this, at all,” said Lynette Agosto, the victim’s sister, as she broke down in tears.

“He stabbed her, in the neck and in the eyes,” said Carmen. “Come on! How am I supposed to feel? And they get this man out [of prison] to murder my daughter. How is the justice system OK?”

Verdecia’s family had reported her missing on Sept. 27, three days after she left home and never returned. They had a picture of her in the passenger seat of a Ford pickup truck.

Her mother reached out to her friends on social media and one said she had seen Verdecia with a “grimy” man at a sandwich shop who told her his name was Eric Pierson.

Carmen Verdecia said at first police wouldn’t report her daughter missing.

“Police would tell me, ‘No, she’s 33, she could be anywhere. She could be with her boyfriend,'” said Verdecia. “No — this is not what my daughter would do.”

Verdecia searched his name on the internet and was horrified to see newspaper stories about his earlier murder and attack.

“I flipped out,” she said. “I told (police) my daughter was seen with a killer. And then they started looking for her. But it was too late.”

Sunrise police said in court documents they had a brief interaction with Pierson and Verdecia during a Sept. 25 traffic stop — the day Pierson told detectives he killed her. She was a passenger in Pierson’s truck and did not appear to be in distress, police said.

When police contacted Pierson again on Oct. 4, he told investigators that Verdecia had walked away when he stopped to get gas shortly after the traffic stop. He said he never saw her again. But surveillance video shows the pair had been at the gas station before the traffic stop, police said.

Police say they questioned the 6-foot-8 (2 meters) Pierson again on Friday. They say he let them search his truck and they found blood inside. His girlfriend later Friday called police to say he would stare at the canal behind her home and say, “Damn that bitch stinks.” She told police he had also said, “If they don’t find a body, they don’t have a case.”

The body was found hours later.

“That’s what he did; he’s a serial killer,” said Amy Ortiz, a friend of the victim. “My best friend died at the hands of a serial killer.”

Verdecia’s family said they don’t know how she knew the suspect but are focusing their intentions on getting justice.

“It is just that the pain and what I feel here, you can’t explain it,” said Carmen. “You just can’t explain what I feel, and that my daughter didn’t die in an accident. She died in the hands of a killer.”

An email message to the Broward County public defender’s office seeking comment was not immediately returned Sunday.

Loved ones have created a GoFundMe page to help Verdecia’s family with expenses. If you would like to make a donation, click here.

Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Join our Newsletter for the latest news right to your inbox