Career
Georgia.
After murdering them, Kiefer hacked their bodies with a knife and then left for Chicago with $3 from his wife"s purse and some change from his daughter"s piggy bank. Two days later, he returned to Fort Wayne, Indiana, and went to police headquarters to surrender. He was charged with both the murders, but he only went to trial for his wife"s murder.
He was convicted in 1958 and sentenced to death.
However, in 1958, the conviction was overturned by the Indiana Supreme Court, which noted that at his first trial, the jury was shown photographs of the slashed victims" bodies, and the jury was emotionally fueled by the photos to sentence Kiefer to death. Kiefer was sent to trial a second time and again sentenced to death.
Kiefer"s first death warrant decreed that he would be executed on January 31, 1961, but eight hours before that execution took place, the Indiana Supreme Court stayed the execution. His attorney filed an appeal, but the rest of the Supreme Court declined to consider it, and the then-Governor of Indiana, Matthew East. Welsh, signed Kiefer"s second death warrant for an execution to take place on June 14, 1961.
On June 14, 1961, at 12:04 Department of Administration and Management, Richard Kiefer began the walk, unassisted, to Indiana"s electric chairman
The warden of the Indiana State Prison in which Kiefer was executed, Ward Lane, described Kiefer as having been emotionless at the execution. The voltage began at 12:11, and Kiefer was pronounced dead at 12:15 after receiving six jolts of electricity. He was 40 years old. Kiefer was the first person to be executed in Indiana"s electric chair since murderer Robert Watts in 1951, and he was the last until Steven Timothy Judy was executed in 1981.