James Fairbanks sentenced: 40–70 years in murder of convicted sex offender

James Fairbanks, who pleaded no contest to second-degree murder in the killing of convicted sex offender Mattieo Condoluci last year, was sentenced in a Douglas County on Wednesday morning.

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28 thoughts on “James Fairbanks sentenced: 40–70 years in murder of convicted sex offender

  • July 14, 2021

    The guy thought that he would be a hero for murdering an unarmed man in cold blood. Glad that the prosecutor and the judge didn’t think he was a hero. Another fine example of how evil public registries are. Another fine example of how hate is running rampant throughout our country. What if it turned out that the victim was actually falsely accused? Would the killer apologize to his family? In Michigan, if you don’t show remorse for committing your crimes, you don’t get paroled. This guy will never show remorse. He belongs there for the full 70 years.

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  • July 14, 2021

    Justice served maybe now the chicken littles of society will think twice before committing street justice.

    Reply
  • July 14, 2021

    I find it disturbing that this particular “news” organization lionized the murderer and made the story more about the murder victim. A casual mention of the decedent’s son speaking in support of him pales in comparison to posting the video of his daughter speaking in support of his killer.

    Equally disturbing that the outlet doesn’t allow comments or provide a means to contact the reporter or editors.

    Reply
  • July 14, 2021

    Good riddance to bad rubbish, but they need to prosecute the creators of the Facebook page that encouraged Fairbanks to commit cold blooded murder. That piece of filth is at least off the streets until he is 84.

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  • July 14, 2021

    I don’t believe in an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. But there is something to be said for Karma. Maybe someone will get to him in prison the way someone got to Dahmer and Whitey Bulger, among others.

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    • July 14, 2021

      Just sayin

      Not sure if you served any prison time or not but I did. Believe me when I tell you, the other inmates will see that guy as a hero. Heck some of the guards will probably praise him. I saw people all the time get jumped for having sex charges. Many times the guards looked the other way the after a good beat down, they would yell “Ok that’s enough, you guys quit fighting”.
      fighting”? Since when is getting your brains kicked in for no reason other than your charges, considered a fight?

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      • July 15, 2021

        They tried that with me. A well placed coke can in a sock taught that inmate I was the wrong one. Ended up cracking his skull. He never ratted on me during his hospital stay and the others thought it best to leave me alone. I’m thinking a kindly worded letter to ol Mr Fairbanks might have him thinking twice about leaving the safety of his new home when the time comes..

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      • July 15, 2021

        Have you tried holding the prison liable?
        Anything that can be done to inflict financial or political damage on this system should be pursued aggressively. Even if you lose, they will spend hundreds of thousands of taxpayer money on defending their negligence. That can then be taken to the public and shoved down the throat of politicians. The system needs to be completely gutted, and you need to take advantage of leverage points to do so.

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  • July 14, 2021

    Finally some justice for him, his family, friends and loved ones, and for everyone on the registry. If he had gotten a slap on the wrist (Which is not uncommon in these types of cases) the yahoos would be coming out of the woodwork because it would have been hunting season on us.

    I do not know exactly what Mister Fairbanks did in the past, but doubt it had any connection to his assassination.

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    • July 14, 2021

      That came out wrong, meant to type I doubt he had any connection to his killer.

      Reply
    • July 14, 2021

      I’m guessing you meant Condoluci (the registrant victim). And no, Fairbanks (the murderer) had nothing to do with the victim’s offenses. It was shown that he had researched all registrants in the area and surmised that if Condoluci wasn’t home that day, Fairbanks simply would have gone on to the next name on his list.

      From what I’ve seen, Fairbanks is a lifelong underachiever who just wanted 15 minutes of fame. Well, those 15 minutes are over. The movement in his name stopped, the donations dried up, and he’s left to wallow in prison for most of (if not all) of his miserable life. As stated above, good riddance.

      Reply

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