Friday, July 4, 2025
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Friday, July 4, 2025

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Susan Crawford Made Excuses When Sex Offender Walked Free Due to Botched Appeal

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Susan Crawford called the massive error in the Thomas Gogin sexual assault case a “simple miscalculation,” citing “faulty memories,” news reports from the time say.

Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Susan Crawford, then a supervisor in the state Department of Justice, made a series of excuses when her unit so badly bungled the state’s appeal of a convicted sex offender’s case that he was freed from prison, archival newspaper research shows. Her comments indicate that she tried to minimize the botched appeal.

“It’s unfortunate that a convicted rapist will now walk free because of the missed appeal deadline,” then-state Rep. Mark Gundrum, R-New Berlin, told the Associated Press in December 2001. That article calls Susan Crawford the “criminal appeals unit director” for then-Attorney General Jim Doyle.

Thomas gogin

She is now running for state Supreme Court and is widely regarded as a leftist Dane County Judge. The other candidate is former Republican AG Brad Schimel, a Waukesha County judge and former Waukesha County District Attorney. WRN has taken the lead in scrutinizing Crawford’s record because the corporate media don’t appear very interested in doing so; for example, as a judge, she released an accused child molester of a 5 year old girl on a signature bond and allowed him to live across from a school and to work out at Planet Fitness. He’s already free due to her light sentence. She also gave a slap on the wrist to another child molester from Middleton.

However, the Thomas Gogin case goes back further, to when Crawford worked for then-Attorney General James Doyle, in whose administration she would hold several roles.

Another attorney in the unit supervised by Crawford was accused of missing the key deadline, wrecking the state’s ability to appeal an appellate court’s order vacating the conviction of Thomas Gogin. We gave Crawford a chance to comment on this story through her campaign, but she did not respond.

Gogin was “released from prison because the state attorney general’s office missed an appeal deadline” in the high-profile case, confirmed an Associated Press article from the time. The botched deadline deeply upset the accuser. The Associated Press confirmed that Crawford supervised the appeals unit in the AG’s office at that time.

“Woman in rape case blasts AG,” the headline of a 2001 AP story reads. The AP story says the rape conviction “was dismissed because the state filed an appeal too late.”

Thomas gogin
Newspapers. Com

“He violated me in the worst possible way that a woman can be violated,” the accuser alleged, according to the Waukesha Freeman. Photos allegedly documented bruises on the woman’s arm, and she accused Gogin of holding a spur against her arm while raping her, the Freeman contended. He denied raping the women.

The state’s bungling of Gogin’s appeal sparked major controversy at the time. Then state Rep. John Townsend told the Fond du Lac Reporter that the attorney general showed “gross incompetence.” However, it’s Crawford who was quoted in multiple newspaper stories giving the excuses.

“Susan Crawford, director of the attorney general’s office, was quoted in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel as labeling the error as a ‘simple miscalculation,’ and citing ‘faulty memories,'” the Fond du Lac Reporter wrote. “She emphasized that justice will be achieved because the attorney general’s office will put whatever resources it has into retrying the case.”

Thomas gogin

But that never happened.

After the missed deadline resulted in Gogin’s release from prison, Gogin pleaded no contest to a reduced charge of felony third-degree sexual assault and was given probation and time served, according to the AP. That was in part out of concerns over putting the accuser through a second trial, news reports from the time say.

Three days after attorney Kathleen Ptacek filed the appeal late (she made the error), supervisor Crawford defended her, according to an Aug. 23, 2001, article in The Capital Times. That story called Crawford “director of the Justice Department’s criminal appeals unit,” and quoted her as saying, “This appears to have been the result of just a simple miscalculation, human error.” She called the lawyer involved “conscientious” and said the lawyer did “her level best.”

The prosecutor, Assistant DA Debra Blasius called the late filing “inexcusable” to The Capital Times, saying, “I can’t even put into words how disappointed I am that the time limit was missed on something this important.”

Thomas gogin

In contrast, Doyle took responsibility. He released a statement saying: “Such mistakes are never excusable.”

“The victim and her family deserve more than my apology,” Doyle said in an AP article that quoted Susan Crawford, the “director of the Justice Department’s criminal appeals unit,” as saying “several staff members” had the appeals date wrong.

The state Department of Corrections subsequently moved to revoke Gogin’s probation after allegedly discovering he had a “firearm, knives, ammunition, and sexually explicit material in his Delafield home,” according to the 2002 AP article.

WRN found this story angle in newspaper archives while doing research on Crawford’s background. Although the newspaper stories quoted her as the unit director, WRN wanted to verify that she was in that supervisory role at the time the mistake was made.

Samantha Standley, DOJ spokesperson, responded to our questions, by saying, “Susan Crawford was employed by DOJ in August 1997, first as an Attorney. She was an Attorney Supervisor at DOJ from December 2000 to February 2003.” We asked which dates she headed the appeals unit specifically. Standley responded a few days later, “The records that old only provide us with the job classification title, not their assignment or working titles.”

The corporate media on the fact that a new ad by Schimel’s campaign on the case alters a photo of Crawford so she isn’t smiling because they thought she should look “ashamed,” according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and AP.

We held the story to continue verifying the supervision dates.

The Associated Press, in a story fixating on the photo, confirmed on February 4, “Crawford headed the division at the time.”

“What I remember about it is that there was (an) assistant attorney general who was assigned that case and prosecuted that case,” Crawford said to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “I was asked by the attorney general, Jim Doyle, at the time to conduct an investigation after that deadline was missed.” She said she investigated the case and “tightened up some procedures

The Botched Appeal

“The victim and Gogin knew each other through their mutual interest in horses and their participation in rodeo-type events,” court records for his appeal say.

“The victim alleged that she accepted Gogin’s invitation to return to his farm after one of these events and that Gogin forcibly restrained and sexually assaulted her Gogin claimed that he and the victim had consensual sexual relations. The jury convicted Gogin,” court records say.

The appellate court had ordered a new trial on the basis of alleged failures by Gogin’s lawyer. According to the Waukesha Freeman, in part, the attorney was accused of failing to bring in a witness who could testify that the accuser had flirted with Gogin and failing to present telephone records showing she allegedly spoke with Gogin on the phone for longer than she claimed. The state wanted to appeal the order to the state Supreme Court in order to keep Gogin behind bars and in the hope the higher court would uphold his conviction. The Supreme Court refused to consider the appeal because of the missed deadline.

According to the Waukesha Freeman, Gogin had originally been sentenced to 7 years in prison.

In a 2001 column in the Waukesha Freeman, Mark Belling wrote that “Doyle’s bungling has turned loose on the streets a man convicted by a jury of rape and false imprisonment.”

Susan Crawford’s Role in Doyle’s Office

Susan Crawford’s LinkedIn page says she was “chief legal counsel” in the office of Gov. Jim Doyle from August 2009 to January 2011.

She also lists that she was an assistant attorney general in the Wisconsin Department of Justice from August 1997 through January 2003.

Her website touts the fact she was “director of criminal appeals” under Doyle.

The appellate court ordered the new trial for Gogin in July 2001. Supreme Court records for the case show that Ptacek filed the petition for review on Aug. 20, 2001. Three days later, Crawford was quoted on the topic.

Doyle took action against the unit, including “providing written instructions to the appeals unit for calculating the deadlines for petitions for review” and “instructing that all due dates for such pending actions be recalculated.”

Republicans in the state Assembly wanted Doyle to order his appeals unit to file appeals with more of a buffer before deadlines.

As a result of the Gogin case bungling, Crawford told the AP the Justice Department was implementing “new procedures that give the agency’s criminal appeals staff 10 days to make a decision on whether to ask the Supreme Court to review a case.”

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2026 GOP Candidate Josh Schoemann Challenges Evers’ Budget Approach

(The Center Square) – Josh Schoemann, the only Republican currently in the race for governor next year, is criticizing Gov. Tony Evers’ approach to the next state budget by comparing it to his plans in Washington County.

“In Washington County our budget cycle starts right now, and it’s not due until November. We will propose our budget goals to the County Board in the next couple of months. We will share ‘This is what we’re thinking.’ It gives them months of time to think those through, give us feedback, and [have] that kind of dialogue,” Schoemann explained in an interview on News Talk 1130 WISN.

Schoemann said that is far better than the approach Evers is taking again this year.

“That’s not how government is supposed to work,” Schoemann said. “It’s not the vision of the governor. It’s not the vision of any one person.”

Evers and the Republican legislative leaders who will write the budget have been involved in on-again, off-again budget talks this month. On Thursday, the governor’s office said those talks were off once again because of gridlock in the Senate.

“Ultimately, the Senate needs to decide whether they were elected to govern and get things done or not,” Evers spokesperson Britt Cudaback said in a post on X.

Schoemann’s criticism of Evers is nothing new. He has long been a critic of the governor and has turned that criticism up since launching his campaign for governor.

But the recent criticism was also aimed at other Republicans who may jump into the 20206 governor’s race later this year.

“Nobody else in this race on the Republican side, being rumored to this point, has the executive leadership of skills and history to be able to show ‘This is how I’ve done it before, and here’s how we’ll do it Madison,’” Schoemann said. “The results in Washington County speak for themselves.”

Northwoods Congressman Tom Tiffany is also rumored to be looking to get into the Republican race. Before he went to Congress, Tiffany was a Republican lawmaker in Madison.

Businessman and veteran Bill Berrien is also on the short list of likely GOP candidates for 2026.

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Wisconsin Budget Negotiations Reach Impasse Between Evers, Legislature

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin budget negotiations have reached an impasse with both sides pointing fingers at the other in Wednesday afternoon statements.

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said Republican Legislative leaders backed out of negotiations after he agreed to “an income tax cut targeting Wisconsin’s middle-class and working families and eliminating income taxes for certain retirees.” He said Republican leaders would not agree to “meaningful increased investments in child care, K-12 schools, and the University of Wisconsin System.”

Republican Assembly leaders said the two sides were "far apart. Senate leaders say Evers’ desires “extend beyond what taxpayers can afford.”

“The Joint Committee on Finance will continue using our long-established practices of crafting a state budget that contains meaningful tax relief and responsible spending levels with the goal of finishing on time,” said a statement from Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, and Assembly Finance Co-Chairman Mark Born, R-Beaver Dam.

Evers said that there were meetings between the sides every day this week before the impasse.

“I told Republicans I’d support their half of the deal and their top tax priorities – even though they’re very similar to bills I previously vetoed – because I believe that’s how compromise is supposed to work, and I was ready to make that concession in order to get important things done for Wisconsin’s kids,” Evers said.

Senate Republican leadership said that good faith negotiations have occurred since April on a budget compromise.

“Both sides of these negotiations worked to find compromise and do what is best for the state of Wisconsin,” said a statement from Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu, R-Oostburg, and Senate Joint Finance Co-Chairman Howard Marklein, R-Spring Green.

In early May, the Joint Committee on Finance took 612 items out of Gov. Tony Evers’ budget proposal, including Medicaid expansion in the state, department creations and tax exemptions.

Born previously estimated that Evers’ budget proposal would lead to $3 billion in tax increases over the two-year span.

Wisconsin Policy Forum estimated that the proposal would spend down more than $4 billion of the state’s expected $4.3 billion surplus if it is enacted.

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DOJ Begins California Title IX Investigation Over ‘Trans’ Boys Dominating Girls’ Sports

The U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division announced it is investigating California for violating Title IX by allowing males to participate in female student sports.

“Title IX exists to protect women and girls in education,” said Harmeet K. Dhillon, assistant attorney general for Civil Rights. “It is perverse to allow males to compete against girls, invade their private spaces, and take their trophies.”

In February, President Donald Trump signed an executive order banning males from participating in female student sports, and he has threatened to block California's federal funding for continuing to defy his order. With California facing deficits in the tens of billions of dollars each year, it's unclear how the state would offset any losses or pauses in federal funding.

Notably, California Gov. Gavin Newsom hosted conservative pundit Charlie Kirk on his podcast and told Kirk that he thinks it’s “deeply unfair” that boys are participating in girls’ sports.

When asked later at a press conference what this means for state policy, Newsom demurred, painting the matter as a marginal, non-issue not worth his time.

“You're talking about a very small number of people, a very small number of athletes, and my responsibility is to address the pressing issues of our time,” said Newsom.

The California Interscholastic Federation, which governs student sports in California, has since responded to Trump’s threat by announcing a new pilot program to allow girls who otherwise would have qualified for sports finals had the finalist spots in girls’ sports not been taken by transgender-identifying boys to participate in said finals.

Title IX was signed into law by President Richard Nixon in 1972 to ensure that schools could not discriminate against female students. It requires they be provided with equal opportunities to engage in athletics, extracurriculars and education.

DOJ’s letter of interest says it is investigating whether California’s Assembly Bill 1266, which requires transgender-identifying students to be allowed to participate in sports consistent with their gender identities, violates Title IX.

“As a result of CIF’s policy, California’s top-ranked girls’ triple jumper, and second-ranked girls’ long-jumper, is a boy,” wrote the DOJ. “As recently as May 17, this male athlete was allowed to take winning titles that rightfully belong to female athletes in both events.”

“This male athlete will now be allowed to compete against those female athletes again for a state title in long, triple, and high jump,” continued the DOJ. “Other high school female athletes have alleged that they were likewise robbed of podium positions and spots on their teams after they were forced to compete against males.”

Should the DOJ find California is in violation of Title IX, it says it will “take appropriate action to eliminate that discrimination, including seeking injunctive relief.”