Nixon was convicted in 1986 on perjury charges and sentenced to 5 years in prison. The offense stemmed from his grand jury testimony and statements to federal officers concerning his intervention in the state drug prosecution of Drew Fairchild, the son of Wiley Fairchild, a business partner of Nixon. Although the case was assigned to a
state court, Wiley Fairchild had asked Nixon to help out by speaking to the
prosecutor. Nixon did so, and the prosecutor, a long-time friend, dropped the case. When Nixon was interviewed by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the
United States Department of Justice, he denied any involvement whatsoever. Subsequently, a
federal grand jury was empaneled and he again denied his involvement. He was convicted of
making false statements to a grand jury. Nixon
appealed his impeachment and removal to the
United States Supreme Court. In
Nixon v. United States, handed down in 1993, the Court rejected his appeal as a
nonjusticiable political question. He returned to private practice in Mississippi from 1993 to 1998. He has practiced law in
Lake Charles,
Louisiana since 1998. ==See also==