In a 4 – 1 vote, the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board denied clemen­cy to Richard Fairchild, the third of 25 peo­ple the state sched­uled for exe­cu­tion between August 2022 and December 2024. Fairchild’s attor­neys argued that he was rep­re­sent­ed at tri­al by incom­pe­tent coun­sel who nev­er pre­sent­ed evi­dence of Fairchild’s severe child­hood abuse and of his repeat­ed trau­mat­ic brain injuries. Fairchild’s clemen­cy peti­tion also detailed the debil­i­tat­ing effects of his seri­ous men­tal ill­ness and organ­ic brain damage.

Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Conner stat­ed that the parole board made the right deci­sion because a jury decid­ed that Fairchild’s exe­cu­tion was a just and appro­pri­ate pun­ish­ment.” One of Fairchild’s attor­neys, Assistant Federal Public Defender Emma Rolls, respond­ed to the deci­sion by say­ing that despite hav­ing lost touch with real­i­ty, Richard remains remorse­ful for his crime and con­tin­ues to have an unblem­ished prison record. There is no prin­ci­pled rea­son for Oklahoma to execute him.” 

Fairchild’s request for clemen­cy focused on the mul­ti­ple head trau­mas he suf­fered through­out his child­hood and ado­les­cence at the hands of his abu­sive father and as a teenaged ama­teur box­er. According to his clemen­cy peti­tion, as an adult, Fairchild also suf­fered five sep­a­rate severe head injuries that were doc­u­ment­ed in his mil­i­tary and medical records.

Evidence of Fairchild’s organ­ic brain dam­age was par­tic­u­lar­ly rel­e­vant because of the facts of his crime. Fairchild was con­vict­ed in 1996 for the mur­der of his girlfriend’s three-year-old son while Fairchild was intox­i­cat­ed. Evidence of trau­mat­ic brain injury could have explained how drugs or alco­hol inter­act­ed with his dam­aged brain and made him more reac­tive to minor provocations.

Fairchild was rep­re­sent­ed at tri­al by John Albert, who was even­tu­al­ly sus­pend­ed from the prac­tice of law because of his sub­stance abuse. Even though a psy­chi­a­trist who eval­u­at­ed Fairchild pri­or to his tri­al doc­u­ment­ed evi­dence of severe organ­ic brain syn­drome,” Albert did not dis­cuss the issue with the psy­chi­a­trist before tri­al and did not ques­tion the psy­chi­a­trist on organ­ic brain dam­age at tri­al. Instead, he explained Fairchild’s behav­ior as sole­ly being induced by substance abuse.

The clemen­cy peti­tion argues that Albert’s fail­ure to intro­duce known evi­dence of Fairchild’s severe brain dam­age was a decid­ing fac­tor in his death sen­tence. A juror’s affi­davit sup­ports this con­tention. The juror stat­ed that if she had been aware of Fairchild’s phys­i­cal brain dam­age, she would not have vot­ed for death. 

According to a neu­ropsy­cho­log­i­cal assess­ment and prison med­ical records, Fairchild’s brain dam­age is accom­pa­nied by severe men­tal ill­ness. In sev­er­al assess­ments span­ning sev­er­al years, Fairchild was found to be florid­ly psy­chot­ic,” dis­con­nect­ed from real­i­ty, and suf­fer­ing from delu­sions and hallucinations.

The peti­tion ends by not­ing Fairchild’s remorse for the crime and request­ing that the board con­sid­er the cir­cum­stances of how his child­hood, his brain dam­age, men­tal ill­ness, and sub­stance abuse con­tributed to the events that took place that night.”

The Pardon and Parole Board vot­ed to deny clemen­cy on October 13, 2022, and Fairchild is sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on November 17. His exe­cu­tion date is also his 63rd birthday.

Citation Guide
Sources

Andy Weber, Advocates Call for State to Spare Life of Oklahoma Death Row Inmate Richard Fairchild, KOCONEWS5 ABC, Oklahoma City, Oct. 7, 2022; Adria Goins, Attorneys for Death Row Inmate Say Mental Illness, Unfair Trial are Reasons for Clemency, Oklahoma’s News 4, Oklahoma City, Oct. 7, 2022; Board Rejects Clemency Request of Oklahoma Death Row Inmate, AP News, Oklahoma City, Oct. 12, 2022; Derrick James, Clemency Denied for Death Row Inmate Richard Fairchild, Enid News & Eagle, Oct. 142022.