Sir Robert Graham of Kinpont (died 1437) was a Scottish landowner, and one of the key conspirators in the assassination of King James I of Scotland in 1437.
When Murdoch and his two sons were executed by James I in 1425, Robert Graham was imprisoned in Dunbar Castle, but was free by 1428.
Yet I do not doubt but that you shall see the day and time that you shall pray for my soul, for the great good that I have done to you, and to all in this realm of Scotland, that I have thus slain and delivered you of so cruel a tyrant...
In 1436, after a disastrous military expedition to Roxburgh, Sir Robert denounced the monarch in Parliament,[4] and attempted to arrest him.
[6] The assassins escaped, but without killing the Queen, Joan Beaufort, who quickly assumed power as regent for the young James II.
[7] However, more recent historians have doubted that the deprivation of Malise Graham was such a strong motivation for Sir Robert's actions.