James Hairston Idaho Death Row

james hairston idaho death row

James Hairston was sentenced to death by the State of Idaho for two murders committed during a robbery. According to court documents James Hairston and an accomplice forced their way into an elderly couples home and proceeded to execute the two victims, William and Dalma Fuhriman both seventy two years old. The robbery netted less than a hundred dollars. James Hairston was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

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James Hairston was sentenced to death Friday by a judge for killing two elderly Downey residents in what the judge called executions for money.

The death penalty was ordered by 6th District Judge Peter McDermott for Hairston, 20, who becomes the 19th death row inmate in Idaho and the youngest.

The sentence came in a packed courtroom including family members of the victims and members of the jury that convicted Hairston of first-degree murder.

Hairston, Grand Junction, Colo., was convicted in September of murdering William “Duke” and Dalma Fuhriman, both 72, at their rural Downey farmhouse. Police said the robbery netted Hairston and an accomplice $30, a credit card and a saxophone.

Hairston also was convicted of robbery, and McDermott sentenced him to life in prison with no possibility of parole for that crime.

McDermott said it was a hard decision to impose the ultimate penalty, but he believes Hairston is a cold-blooded, pitiless killer who would kill again if paroled from prison or if he escaped from a less than secure prison setting.

He said Hairston gets a “rush” from shooting people.

“You basically executed these two individuals to be financially rewarded,” McDermott told Hairston.

Hairston, standing between public defenders Randy Schulthies and Tom Eckert, showed no emotion as the sentences were imposed.

Bannock County Prosecutor Mark Hiedeman said Hairston would be taken to the maximum security state prison in Boise.

No execution date was set, but it will be set aside for the Idaho Supreme Court’s automatic review in all death sentence cases.

Co-defendant Richard Klipfel, 27, received a fixed prison term of 20 years to life for his part in the crime. He also is from Grand Junction.

A Grand Junction convenience store clerk, Crystal Bunker, who was shot in the head in a robbery two days before the Downey murders on Jan. 6, was in the courtroom.

She testified at Hairston’s trial that he shot her during a holdup.

“I hope it can help with closure,” she said as she hugged members of the Fuhriman family.

The family hoped McDermott would impose the death penalty, said Jessie Fuhriman, a daughter-in-law of the couple.

“Nothing can bring them back, but that is the most that he (Hairston) can give in restitution, and the Lord will take care of him after that,” she said.

A son of the couple, Crae, also wanted the death penalty.

“I don’t think he has any remorse or any bad feelings for what he did.”

https://www.spokesman.com/stories/1996/nov/16/judge-sentences-man-to-death-20-year-old-james/

Timothy Dunlap Idaho Death Row

timothy dunlap idaho death row

Timothy Dunlap was sentenced to death by the State of Idaho for the murder of a woman during a bank robbery. According to court documents Timothy Dunlap would enter an Idaho bank and demand money from the teller, the teller handed over the money and Timothy proceeded to shoot her anyway. Timothy Dunlap would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Timothy Dunlap is also under a death sentence in Ohio for the murder of an ex girlfriend.

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On October 16, 1991, Dunlap entered and robbed the Security State Bank in Soda Springs, Idaho. Dunlap entered the bank, stood within a few feet of bank teller Tonya Crane, and ordered her to give him all of her money. Without hesitation, Tonya Crane did so. Dunlap immediately and calmly pulled the trigger of his sawed-off shotgun, which was less than two feet from Tonya Crane’s chest, literally blowing her out of her shoes. Police officers responded immediately. When the officers arrived at the bank, Tonya Crane had no pulse. When taken to the hospital she was pronounced dead on arrival.

Dunlap fled the scene, but subsequently surrendered to police. After being given his Miranda rights, Dunlap confessed to the murder and to a murder that occurred ten days before in Ohio. The following day, Dunlap again confessed and explained how he planned and completed both murders. Dunlap was charged with first-degree murder and robbery.

https://casetext.com/case/state-v-dunlap-93

Thomas Creech Idaho Death Row

thomas creech idaho death row

Thomas Creech was sentenced to death by the State of Idaho for a prison murder. According to court documents Thomas Creech who was serving life for two murders, but according to the serial killer he is responsible for many more, when he murdered a fellow inmate in 1981. Thomas Creech would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. This is the second time Thomas Creech is on Idaho death row for the penalty for the last two murders he was convicted of the punishment was hanging however the death penalty was ruled to be unconstitutional and his sentence was commuted to life. Five years later and he would kill again.

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He’s made claims of killing over 40 people, and he’s been sitting on death row in Idaho for nearly 40 years for the murder of one.

His name is Thomas Eugene Creech, and he’s been on death row in Idaho for over 37 years now for the murder of prison inmate David Dale Jensen on May 13th of 1981, but that isn’t the only murder Creech is convicted of committing and it isn’t the only time Creech was sentenced to death row.

At the time of the murder of David Dale Jensen in 1981, Jensen and Creech were both inmates housed inside the maximum security prison at Idaho’s penitentiary. Creech was serving time for two murder convictions in Idaho.

“He was convinced to attack and did in fact murder David Jensen, a 22 or 23-year-old young man who was in prison as a car thief,” said Jim Harris, former Ada County Prosecutor who asked for the death penalty against Creech in 1982.

According to court documents, Jensen was partially disabled. Years earlier, in an attempted suicide, he shot himself in the head, resulting in the removal of part of his brain and a plastic plate being placed in his skull, causing impaired speech and motor functions.

Court documents say he and Thomas Creech were not on good terms. Creech was a janitor at the penitentiary at the time, and court documents say Creech and Jensen had argued about Jensen dirtying the floor, something Creech had to clean up.

Because of his janitorial duties, Thomas Creech was the only prisoner who could be out of his cell at the same time as another inmate.

“Both Chuck Palmer and I wrote letters to the penitentiary warden, during that time frame, once he was released, warning the warden and the penitentiary system that this was a very dangerous criminal,” said Harris.

Chuck Palmer was the Ada County Sheriff at the time. He and Jim Harris, Ada County Prosecuting Attorney in 1981, both believed that if Creech were given the opportunity to kill, even while in prison, he would act on it.

That’s what happened on May 13th of 1981. David Dale Jensen was released from his cell for an hour to exercise and shower. Jensen had other plans during that time though. Court documents say David Dale Jensen attacked Thomas Creech with a sock filled with batteries.

Creech was able to take the weapon away from Jensen, and it was that same weapon Creech would later use to beat Jensen to death.

In an exclusive letter to us from Creech he admits to that, again, “…yes…I killed that guy. But he attacked me,” wrote Creech

Creech went on to claim self defense in the incident, but prosecution argued he went above and beyond self defense.

Following that murder in 1981, Creech was handed the death penalty sentence in 1983 for the second time in his life. You see, that wasn’t his first murder.

“His criminal history started at the age of 16,” said Harris.

Former Ada County Prosecutor Jim Harris said Creech spoke to him about his childhood.

“I think it was potentially the loss of his father at a very young age. Particularly since the man essentially died in his arms. His first enemy. His first attempted murder was the male nurse that failed to get help to his father before he died,” said Harris.

The Journal News out of Hamilton, Ohio wrote that Creech claimed he committed his first murder at the age of 17 by, “drowning a friend in New Miami who he believed was responsible for the traffic death of his girlfriend.” The paper also stated Creech claimed to have killed five people from a motorcycle gang in Ohio for “satanic cult worship rituals.”

In a United Press International article from 1986, writer Steve Green reported that Creech ran away from home and claims to have killed a man in San Francisco in 1965. During that time in San Francisco, sources say Thomas Creech became involved with the Church of Satan before it was officially organized in 1969.

In 1973 Creech married Thomasine Loren White. That same year both of them were wanted in connection of the murder of Paul C. Schrader in Tucson, Arizona.

The Tucson Daily Citizen paper reported on January 4th, 1974 that Paul C. Schrader was stabbed to death at the Downtown Motor Hotel in Tucson, Arizona. Creech was arrested for the murder in Beaver, Utah and taken back to Arizona to face charges, but after hours of deliberation, 23-year-old Creech was acquitted of the Tucson murder.

In 1974, Creech and his wife, Thomasine, moved to Portland.

A United Press International article stated that Thomas Creech spent some time in the Oregon psychiatric hospital in Salem.

After he was released, he moved into the St. Marks Episcopal Church in Portland and began work as their resident maintenance worker.

In the exclusive letter Creech sent to us, he said his wife Thomasine was raped by 11 men and tossed out a window 4 stories high that left her “paraylzed and damaged mentally,” wrote Creech.

She later died by suicide in the Oregon State Hospital. His letter to us also stated that he killed some of the men who allegedly raped his wife.

Also in 1974, Creech was convicted of killing 22-year-old William Joseph Dean.

An article from the United Press International stated that Dean’s body was found in Creech’s living quarters inside the St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Portland.

And later that same year, two traveling painters were found shot to death in Idaho.

Authorities say Thomas Creech and his girlfriend Carol Spaulding were hitchhiking from Lewiston to Donnelly, Idaho when two men by the name of Edward T. Arnold and John Wayne Bradford picked them up in their 1956 Buick. Thomas shot John and Edward then partially buried their bodies off Highway 55 in Donnelly.

The judge in the case, J. Ray Durtschi said Creech denied killing the two in Idaho in court, but admitted to being a mass murderer. Judge Durtschi recorded his recollection of Creech’s original 1975 trial in an audio recording for the Idaho Historical Society before his passing.

“It was verified that they did find some of the bodies that he identified before them and showed them where they was. That was his defense in my case. He says my goodness I’m admitting I killed all these other people. I wouldn’t deny this if I had done it,” said Judge Durtschi.

A statement from the Idaho Supreme Court noted, “Creech ‘has admitted to killing or participating in the killing of at least 26 people. The bodies of 11 of his victims who were shot, stabbed, beaten, or strangled to death have been recovered in 7 states.”

And former Ada County Prosecutor Jim Harris said, “They found a large number of skeletons that Tom lead them to in a mine shaft in California.”

Judge J. Ray Durtschi also made this statement inside the courthouse in Wallace, Idaho, “Law enforcement officers were worried about him in the trial. Worried about security because of all the rumors getting around that he had been a member of the Hell’s Angels and they were going to come up her and break him out. And I moved him up to Wallace to try him where there had not been any publicity.”

Judge Durtschi found Creech guilty of the Donnelly murders and sentenced him to hang in March of 1976.

At that time, Idaho’s law stated a first-degree murder charge was a mandatory death sentence. That law was later ruled unconstitutional by the Idaho Supreme Court in 1979, and Creech was sentenced to life in prison.

That didn’t sit well with Sheriff Palmer or Prosecutor Jim Harris.

“In our opinion Creech was a psychotic and he didn’t like inmates and he would probably kill someone if they didn’t supervise him very closely around other inmates. It was a short time after that Creech was allowed trustee status and given full run of several sections of maximum security as a janitor,” said Harris.

That statement was almost a foreshadow of what was to come a mere two years later when Thomas Creech killed again.

The prosecution quoted this statement made by Creech in court, “And okay. I kicked him a couple more times and he was laying there bleeding real bad and breathing real funny.”

By 1982 Thomas Creech was convicted for the murder of David Dale Jensen and he was back on death row.

Then, just a few years later Creech filed a writ of habeas corpus

And in the midst of appeals, former Ada County Deputy Prosecutor Roger Bourne made this statement in court in 1995, “If the death penalty doesn’t fit this defendant. Who does it fit? This defendant is a mass murderer. He has shown extreme violence while in the penitentiary. If the legislature didn’t intend it to fit this defendant. Who could it fit any better?”

Creech was scheduled for execution, again, in 1999, but on June 14th of that year, the Federal District Court granted a stay of execution, and as of November 1, 2019, no execution date is set.

https://www.kivitv.com/news/the-history-of-an-idaho-serial-killer-who-has-been-on-and-off-death-row-for-nearly-43-years

Azad Abdullah Idaho Death Row

Azad Abdullah Idaho Death Row

Azad Abdullah was sentenced to death by the State of Idaho for the murder of his wife and the attempted murder of his two children plus a child friend. According to court documents Azad Abdullah would murder his wife and then set fire to their Idaho home with the three children still inside, thankfully the children were rescued. Azad Abdullah would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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An Idaho death row inmate will remain there following an Idaho Supreme Court decision upholding a lower court’s ruling rejecting a post-conviction relief request.

The Idaho Supreme Court in a 189-page decision released Monday ruled that 37-year-old Azad Haji Abdullah’s death sentence for killing his wife and trying to kill three children will remain in place.

Abdullah received the death penalty after being convicted in 2004 of first-degree murder, first-degree arson, three counts of attempted first-degree murder, and felony injury to a child.

Authorities say Abdullah in 2002 killed his wife in their Boise home and then set fire to the house with two of their children and a young friend asleep inside. Another of their children was in the backyard.

https://magicvalley.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/idaho-supreme-court-upholds-death-penalty-sentence/article_e99ac64a-c1e5-11e4-8384-3f1d83c0f774.html

Robin Lee Row Women On Death Row

Robin Lee Row Women On Death Row

Robin Lee Row has the honour of being the only women on Idaho’s death row. Robin Lee Row who decided to torch the home of her ex husband killing him and their two children. According to authorities before she set the fire Robin Lee Row had taken out large insurance policies on her husband and children. According to the autopsy reports all three victims died from carbon monoxide poisoning. Robin Lee Row would be arrested, convicted and eventually sentenced to death for the fatal arson

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robin row
Mailing Address:POCATELLO WOMAN’S CORRECTIONAL CENTER, UNIT 4
1451 Fore Road Pocatello, Idaho 83205
Status:Age:Inmate
62
Phone Number:208-236-6360
IDOC Sentence InformationData current as of: 4:15am Tuesday October 29th 2019
The sentence information shown is for active sentences under the jurisdiction, custody and/or supervision of the Idaho Department of Correction only.
OffenseSentencing CountyCase No.Sentence Satisfaction Date
MURDER, 1ST DEGREEADA18945Death
ARSON, 1ST DEGREEADA1894512/15/2013

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During the early morning hours of February 10, 1992, a fire broke out at Robin Lee Row’s two-story apartment in a duplex at 10489 Seneca, in Boise, Idaho, and local fire trucks were dispatched to the scene.   Due to recent problems in her relationship with her husband, Row was not living at the residence at that time.   Instead, she was staying with a friend, Joan McHugh.   After the fire was sufficiently under control, fire crews entered the apartment and found the bodies of Row’s husband, Randy Row, and her two children, Joshua (age 10) and Tabitha (age 8).   All three had died from carbon monoxide poisoning as a result of the fire.

Fire investigators found that the fire primarily started where the apartment joined the garage and that a second fire was started in some clothes piled in the living room.   The investigators determined that a flammable, liquid accelerant was used to ignite the fire, and found that the smoke detector in the residence had been disabled before the fire when the power to the upstairs was cut off at the circuit breaker.   As a result of the disconnected smoke alarm, the victims were not alerted to the fire which caused their deaths. An investigation by the police ensued.  

The police discovered Robin Lee Row had lost a daughter to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome in 1977, and that her son, Keith, had died in a house fire in California in 1980.   A warrant was obtained to search Row’s burned apartment, Joan McHugh’s residence where Robin Lee Row was staying on the night of the fire, Row’s automobile, and Row’s storage unit located in Meridian, Idaho. During the search, the police discovered six insurance policies carried by Row on the lives of the deceased members of the Row family.   These policies named Robin Lee Row as the beneficiary and provided a total of $276,500 in death benefits.   The most recent policy had been obtained by Row on January 24, 1992, just seventeen days before the fatal fire.

In addition, at the storage unit in Meridian, police discovered evidence tending to prove that Robin Lee Row had been stealing from the bingo operation run by the YWCA where Row worked.   This discovery resulted in Row’s arrest on February 13, 1992, for grand theft by unauthorized control of funds belonging to the YWCA.   She was placed in the Ada County Jail, and bail was set at $100,000. While the arson and multiple-death investigation continued, Detective Raney prevailed upon Joan McHugh to put a tape recorder on her telephone to record conversations between herself and Row, if Row happened to call.  

Around 1:00 on the afternoon of March 20, 1992, Row telephoned McHugh from the jail.   As suggested by Detective Raney, McHugh told Robin Lee Row that she had awakened during the night of the fire and had gone downstairs, but could not find Row in the residence.   In response, Robin Lee Row told McHugh that she had left the residence that night, but stated that she was outside the house talking to her psychiatrist. At about the same time on March 20, police and the prosecutor were holding a press conference to announce that a criminal complaint for three counts of murder had been filed against Row.   The following Monday, March 23, Robin Lee Row was arrested while still in the Ada County Jail.   She made her initial appearance before the magistrate that same day.   The complaint was subsequently amended to include the charge of aggravated arson.

Robin Lee Row’s counsel filed a series of pretrial motions seeking to suppress statements Row had made to McHugh while she was incarcerated on the theft charge.   The district court denied these motions.   On March 5, 1993, following a jury trial, the jury returned verdicts of guilty on the murder and arson charges.   A sentencing hearing was held, and on December 16, 1993, the district court imposed the death sentence.   Row filed a notice of appeal on January 26, 1994.

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Attorneys for the only woman on Idaho’s death row say Robin Lee Row’s triple murder conviction should be thrown out because her trial attorneys didn’t have the time or money to develop evidence that Row’s brain had atrophied, and the damage may have hindered her decision-making abilities.

Row, now 52, was convicted of murdering husband Randy Row, 34, and her children from a previous marriage, Joshua Cornellier, 10, and Tabitha Cornellier, 8, by setting their duplex on fire in 1992. Row had two other children who died years earlier — a baby who investigators said died of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and a son named Keith who was killed in a 1980 California house fire that investigators ruled accidental.

Fourth District Judge Alan Schwartzman sentenced Row to death in 1993, calling her a pathological liar and citing her purchase of $276,000 worth of life insurance for her family the year before they died.

“Robin Row’s actions represent the final betrayal of motherhood and embody the ultimate affront to civilized notions of maternal instinct,” Schwartzman said during her sentencing. “Maternal ’pedocide’ — the killing of one’s own children — is the embodiment of the cold-blooded, pitiless slayer — a descent into the blackened heart of darkness.”

Row’s appeals attorney, Teresa Hampton, told U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill on Thursday that her client’s trial attorneys didn’t do enough to develop evidence that could have resulted in a lesser sentence.

“There is significant and powerful mitigating evidence that should have been developed at trial,” she said.

Row’s childhood was marred by long-term sexual abuse and mentally ill family members, and her own medical history included evidence of mental illness, including serious suicide attempts, Hampton said.

But Hampton said a CT scan showing Row had brain atrophy is “the major red flag in this case” that, if explored, could have changed the outcome. Brain atrophy is a loss of brain cells and the connections between them, and it can occur for a number of reasons, including trauma and disease. The damage left by atrophy can sometimes lead to mental illness, dementia and other problems.

Row’s trial attorneys did ask the court for money to hire an expert to evaluate Row’s brain function and history, but the trial judge refused their request and instead referred them to the public defender’s budget, Hampton said. The judge also refused to allow them additional time to investigate on their own, she said.

But Jessica Lorello, the deputy attorney general representing the state, said Row’s trial attorneys were never deprived the money or the time they needed to come up with mitigating evidence.

“The court’s position always was, ’I don’t know why you can’t take this out of the public defender’s budget,”’ Lorello said. “In terms of that social history evidence … the court determined it ultimately wouldn’t have made a difference.”

Winmill said he would take the matter under advisement and could have a ruling in the next several weeks.

https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/aug/06/only-woman-idaho-death-row-appeals-sentence/

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Robin Lee Row is currently incarcerated at the POCATELLO WOMAN’S CORRECTIONAL CENTER, home of Idaho Death Row For Women

Why Is Robin Lee Row On Death Row

Robin Lee Row was convicted of three murders, her ex husband and two children