The execution of Richard Laird, who was sentenced to death in two different trials for the murder of Pennsylvania artist Anthony Milano, has been put on hold. Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett signed a death warrant calling for Laird to be executed for the murder of Milano in 1987. But Judge Rea B. Boylan granted a stay of execution while Laird's attorneys pursue post-conviction appeals. He gave Laird's lawyers time to file an amended petition, and set a deadline for prosecutors to respond. A day later, U.S. District Court Judge Jan E. DuBois granted a stay in federal court. Two juries, one in 1988 and another in 2007, both convicted and sentenced Laird (b. September 7, 1963 | aged 60) to death for his role in the murder of the 26-year-old Milano. Prosecutors say he was targeted because he was gay. In 2001, DuBois had overturned Laird's original conviction on a number of grounds. He was retried in 2007 and once again sentenced to death. Prosecutors said Laird and his friend Frank Chester harassed Milano at a bar because he was gay. They then forced him to drive them home. Milano was later found dead along a road, beaten and slashed in the throat so many times that his spinal cord was severed. Chester also received a death sentence, though it was recently overturned. Prosecutors are still contesting that decision.
R. Laird. Autographed Letter, Signed. Handwritten, Commercial #10 (4.125 × 9.5 envelope). N.p. Pmk: October 10, 2023. Content unknown. SEALED.
Richard R. Laird, who’s been on death row for 35 years for the gruesome killing of gay artist Anthony Milano, last week asked an appeals court to vacate his death sentence.
In December 1987, Laird and his accomplice Frank R. Chester kidnapped Milano, 26 (tempore delicti), to a wooded area in Tullytown, PA., and slashed his throat so many times that Milano’s head was nearly severed.
The case became a cause célèbre in the local LGBT community because both defendants voiced homophobic slurs inside a Bucks County tavern, prior to kidnapping Milano and killing him. Prosecutors described the case as a “hate crime”, even though a federal hate-crime statute protecting the LGBT community wasn’t enacted until 2009.
In 1988, Laird and Chester were sentenced to death by a Bucks County jury. But both men eventually were granted new trials due to faulty jury instructions.
Rather than retry Chester, Bucks County authorities agreed to remove him from death row to the general prison population. In return, Chester agreed to serve a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Chester, 55, is currently incarcerated at a state prison in LaBelle, PA.
However, no such deal was offered to Laird, and after a second trial in 2007, he was resentenced to death.
In a 204-page appeal filed with the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, attorneys for Laird emphasized the sexual abuse he allegedly experienced from his father as a young boy. According to the appeal, Laird was continually raped by his father between the ages of five and 11. Laird’s father, Richard Laird Sr., is deceased.
The appeal contends that jurors in 2007 weren’t informed about the severity of Laird’s sexual abuse. Instead, they apparently thought Laird was “a mean drunk who hated gay people and recognized [Milano] to be one of them.” If jurors realized that Laird’s homophobia was linked to his father’s sexual abuse, they may have spared his life, according to the appeal.
Laird lacked effective assistance of counsel because his trial attorneys failed to adequately investigate his abusive background and convey it to jurors. Thus, Laird’s constitutional right to a fair trial was violated and his death sentence should be vacated, according to the appeal.
Laird’s appeal was initially filed. But after Laird’s attorneys were questioned by a PGN reporter about their use of the term “homosexual” throughout the appeal, they refiled the appeal without the problematic language.
Bucks County District Attorney Matthew D. Weintraub issued the following statement about Laird’s appeal: “We remain just as committed to the appeal and prosecution of Richard Laird for his hate-based murder of Anthony Milano now as much as ever. We do so in order to serve justice, and to honor Mr. Milano’s memory.”
A spokesperson for Weintraub was asked if an agreement with Laird would be possible—similar to the agreement with Chester—allowing Laird to leave death row if he agreed to serve a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Laird, 60, is currently on death row at a state prison in Collegeville, PA.
Justin F. Robinette, a local civil-rights attorney, has been following Laird’s case. “I’m glad the references to ‘homosexual’ were deleted from Mr. Laird’s appeal. But I’m not comfortable with his apparent gay-panic defense. Mr. Laird was rightfully subject to the death penalty for this crime. With that said, after 35 years of protracted litigation, I’d like to see an end to it. If Mr. Chester was offered life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, why not consider the same deal for Mr. Laird?”
Archiving Protocol:
• Handled with White Gloves ab initio
• Photo Pages/Sheet Protectors: Heavyweight Clear Sheet Protectors, Acid Free & Archival Safe, 8.5 × 11, Top Load
• White Backing Board—Acid Free
Shipping/Packaging: Rigid Mailer 9.5 × 12.5. White, self seal, stay flat, kraft cardboard, no bend. Each rigid mailer is made of heavy cardboard, which has strong resistance to bending and tearing. Thicker that the USPS mailers. Shipping cost never more than it absolutely has to be to get it from me to you.