Wednesday, October 22, 2025
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Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Milwaukee Press Club 'Excellence in Wisconsin Journalism' 2020 & 2021 Award Winners

Judge Rules Wife Killer Should Not Be Paroled Because Evers’ Admin Didn’t Notify Victim’s Daughter

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“I am the daughter of that piece of scum, sitting in the chair. I don’t understand how you can look at someone who murdered someone, stabbed them over 43 times and say that they should be allowed to walk outside of bars” – Nikkole Nelson, the daughter of victim Johanna Rose Balsewicz.

An administrative law judge, Brian Hayes, has ruled that wife killer Douglas Balsewicz should not be released early on parole because the state Department of Corrections did not give the victim’s daughter Nikkole a chance to voice her objections to the decision to free him, the victim’s family told Wisconsin Right Now.

The judge’s ruling on September 30, 2022, came after an emotional August hearing into Balsewicz’s appeal of last spring’s Parole Commission decision to revoke his parole just days before he was to walk out of prison.

Gov. Tony Evers’ appointee John Tate had initially granted Balsewicz discretionary parole, which the victim’s family found out about “through the grapevine.” He then rescinded the decision after intense criticism erupted from the victim’s family. Balsewicz had a right to appeal the parole reversal to Hayes.

Evers belatedly pressured Tate to revoke the release, a fact emphasized at the appeal hearing by Balsewicz’s lawyer, Tony Cotton, who painted the change as a political move because of the looming election.

Hayes’ decision is a recommendation that now goes back to Evers’ new appointee to the Parole Commission, Chris Blythe, who will decide whether Balsewicz should be freed or the reversal should stand.

Blythe banned public comment at his first hearing as chair this week, and he said victims’ families weren’t notified because they didn’t sign up for the notification system. However, at the appeal hearing, the state admitted that there were gaps in their victim notification process that led to Nikkole not being informed about the parole hearing.

Wisconsin Right Now has been writing a series of stories about brutal killers released by Tate in discretionary paroles during the first three years of Evers’ tenure. Evers reappointed Tate in 2021 after many of the killers’ releases. Multiple families told us they were not notified by the state Department of Corrections despite state law saying a reasonable attempt must be made to reach victims before paroles. Some families believed they were registered until they suddenly stopped getting notice.

State law says a parole can be rescinded if there is a change of circumstance before an inmate is released, so it may be too late for those families. Evers has not commented on the other cases, which are just as severe.

At the appeal hearing, a transcript of which we obtained, the victim’s daughter, Nikkole, finally was given her voice by the system at long last. And what she told Judge Brian Hayes about the parole possibility of Balsewicz was searing. She said, in part:

“I am the daughter of that piece of scum, sitting in the chair. I don’t understand how you can look at someone who murdered someone, stabbed them over 43 times and say that they should be allowed to walk outside of bars. What he did …messed up a whole lot of people’s lives. Including mine and my brother’s. I mean, we didn’t have anyone growing up. We didn’t have a mom. He took that away from us. And we didn’t have a father.

He, because of what Doug did, it messed me up physically, emotionally, and mentally, And, I went through a lot of counseling. I couldn’t talk until I was six. I had nightmares until like 14 years old of what happened that night over and over and over. And for some reason people think he deserves to get out on parole.

…I just think it’s extremely unfair. My mom didn’t get a second chance so why should he? I’d be very frightened if he got out of prison. And, considering the fact that no one notified me or told me how to be notified of his release or his paroles, it was quite scary… so congratulations that he mopped the floor, and he passed the test. But how does that judge how he will survive outside and not do it again to some one else? I think he deserves to rot in prison for the rest of his life.”

Nikkole was a toddler when her mother was killed; she was lying in bed next to her and was found the next day, with her small brother, covered in blood, walking down the street. Her brother died in a car crash a couple years ago.

At the hearing on Balsewicz’s appeal, Elizabeth Lucas, director of the state Department of Corrections’ Office of Victim Services and Programs, testified that Nikkole did not receive notice because she was not enrolled in the state’s notification system. Adult victims are told of that system during the original court case by the DA’s office or local victim/witness offices. But Nikkole was a juvenile then so she wasn’t informed.

“We did not have any mechanism to track minor victims once they reach age,” Lucas testified of the state’s notification failures in the case.

Victim notification is handled by the Department of Corrections, which falls under Evers’ authority and is run by a cabinet appointee.

Either way, though, Balsewicz will come up for parole again in January.

“I wanted to let you know that the Division of Hearings and Appeals has agreed with the decision of the Wisconsin Parole Commission to rescind the Parole Grant,” Diana Lewis, Program Manager for the Office of Victim Services & Programs, Department of Corrections, wrote the family of Johanna Rose about Hayes’ decision.

“This means that Administrator Hayes is recommending that the decision to rescind the grant should stand. The new Parole Chair, Christopher Blythe, will now decide whether or not sustain the recommendation and previous decision. If the Chair sustains this decision, the next Parole Interview is scheduled to be sometime in January of 2023.”

Johanna’s sisters Kim Binder Cornils and Karen Kannenberg told Wisconsin Right Now they were informed that the judge ground his decision in the fact the state did not give notification to all members of the victims’ family (Nikkole was the major focus) so their voices could be heard at Balsewicz’s parole hearing. The family does not have the full decision yet.

Tate testified at the appeal hearing. We will be writing a separate story on that testimony.

In a statement to Wisconsin Right Now, Johanna’s family said they want Blythe to “hear from us” and follow the recommendation of sentencing Judge Diane Sykes that Balsewicz should not be granted early release.

“As victims, you are always being re-victimized,” they said. “The family has had to go through parole hearings after parole hearings to relive the death of our sister. We feel we are being re-victimized every few months.”

But they stressed: “The fight is so strong. We are not going to give up until the right thing is done – him staying in prison. You can not rehabilitate jealousy and control.”

The family said they want to help the families of other murder victims whose cases Wisconsin Right Now has been profiling for weeks.

“It’s not just our family,” Johanna’s siblings said. “It’s heart-wrenching and sad and makes you cry to see what people had to go through. We want to keep fighting with these other families. We were the lucky ones. We found out before (he walked out of prison). That’s not the case with many of these families. We have to continue to fight to change the system. None of it is right.”

Evers initially did not respond to the victim’s pleas, nor did Tate. However, after the victim’s family members went to the state Capitol to literally knock on the governor’s office door, he switched tactics and agreed to meet with them last spring.

As media attention ignited around the killer’s looming release, Evers suddenly did an about-face and urged Tate to rescind the release because of problems with victim notification, especially Nikkole. Tate did so. As pressure built on Republican legislators to reject Tate’s nomination (they had left it hang for years, making him an acting chair), Evers suddenly asked Tate to quit, which Tate did.

Wisconsin Right Now, in the wake of that case, filed an open records request seeking the names of other murderers and rapists granted discretionary parole by Evers. The list of hundreds of discretionary paroles during the first three years’ of Evers’ tenure includes some of the most brutal killers in state history. The Parole Commission has not released the names of parolees released in 2022. We have filed suit with the Wisconsin Institute of Law and Liberty to get them.

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Wisconsin Lawmakers Propose Legalizing Mobile Sports Wagering

(The Center Square) – A group of Wisconsin lawmakers are proposing a law that would allow mobile sports wagering across the state through the state’s current tribal operators.

The law would allow for a similar sports wagering model as Florida where the state’s sportsbook operators have servers on federally recognized tribal lands while users can be in the state of Wisconsin.

The proposal cites the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2024 decision not to hear a challenge to the sports wagering pact between Florida and the Seminole tribe of the hub-and-spoke sports wagering model.

Legal sports wagering is currently only allowed on tribal lands in Wisconsin while prediction markets such as Kalshi are now legal across the U.S.

The Ho-Chunk Nation currently has a lawsuit filed against Kalshi for operating in the state.

The bill is being proposed by Reps. Tyler August, R-Walworth, and Kalan Haywood, D-Milwaukee, along with Sens. Howard Marklein, R-Spring Green, and Kristin Dassler-Alfheim, D-Appleton.

“This legislation is an important step to bring Wisconsin in alignment with the majority of the country in regards to sports wagering," Haywood said in a statement. "For too long, illegal, offshore entities have profited from consumers through unregulated sports wagering, without generating revenue for local economies.

"By regulating this multi-billion-dollar industry, we can provide a safer mobile wagering experience for Wisconsin consumers, and generate much needed revenue to invest into our communities.”

Wisconsin receives payments that are a portion of the net win from tribal casinos but does not separately reports sports wagering payments.

In 2024, the state received more than $66 million in shared revenue payments with nearly $66 million in 2023 and nearly $57 million in 2022.

Sports wagering is legal in 39 states with 31 allowing mobile sports wagering.

Sponsors sent out the proposed legislation to fellow lawmakers this week asking for co-sponsors before Oct. 22.

“This bill does not authorize gambling on its own; it only is one part in a multi-step process to create the legal framework necessary for Wisconsin to participate in mobile sports wagering under tribal compacts,” the proposal said. “Gaming compacts between states and tribes need to be federally approved by the U.S. Department of Interior before going into effect.”

Making a sports bet in the state is currently a misdemeanor offense and the bill would exclude from the legal term “bet” any mobile sports wager with an approved sportsbook with servers located on tribal lands.

The bill estimates it will bring hundreds of millions of illegal bets into legal sportsbooks in the state, stating the change “generates new revenue through tribal gaming compacts and reduces consumer risk from offshore operators.”

Jill Underly

Thursday Hearing Set on Sexual Misconduct, Grooming in Wisconsin Schools

(The Center Square) – A hearing is scheduled for 11 a.m. on Thursday to address concerns about sexual misconduct and grooming in schools.

Committee on Government Operations, Accountability and Operations Chair Rep. Amanda Nedweski, R-Pleasant Prairie, scheduled the hearing and invited State School Superintendent Jill Underly, along with law enforcement.

Nedweski announced Thursday night she would be introducing three bills related to the case including a grooming law, standards for communication between students and faculty and to end a "loophole" where educators can surrender their teaching license rather than facing further investigation.

She had previously been working on the grooming law and bill on communications standards after the case of Kenosha teacher Christian Enwright, who pleaded guilty to 12 misdemeanors for his conduct sending hundreds of Snapchat messages to a student that resulted in a sentence of 450 days in jail and three years of probation.

“Since the Kenosha County Eye exposed Christian Enwright’s predatory behavior toward a student, I have been working on anti-grooming legislation that will establish harsh penalties for any adult convicted of grooming a minor for sexual activity,” Nedweski said in a statement. “This proposal will be modeled after comprehensive laws passed in other states and will give our law enforcement and prosecutors the tools they need to keep children safe.”

Senate Committee on Education Chair John Jagler and Vice Chair Romaine Quinn asked a series of 12 questions of Underly and demanded to get a response within 24 hours of the Thursday afternoon letter on if she will be willing to testify before the committee.

The Senate committee leaders had not heard back from Underly or her office as of 11:30 a.m. on Friday.

The Capital Times report showed that 200 investigations into teachers for sexual misconduct and grooming were shielded from the public by DPI and that accused teachers were able to forfeit their teaching license to avoid further investigation into alleged grooming.

The Center Square was unable to get comment from Underly or Gov. Tony Evers before publication.

School Choice in Wisconsin regulations for school vouchers School Choice Poll

Wisconsin School Choice Enrollment Hit New High, Worries Persist

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s latest enrollment numbers show some good news for choice schools in the state, but there’s also a warning sign.

School Choice Wisconsin said choice enrollment hit a new record high of 60,972 students.

“Parents are speaking loudly and clearly about what they want for their children: more educational options different than those offered by public schools,” School Choice Wisconsin Vice President Carol Shires said.

The nearly 61,000 choice students this year is up from less than 34,000 in the 2016-2017 school year.

And, Shires said, the new record-high comes just as Wisconsin’s choice school enrollment cap expires.

“Lawmakers in Madison should continue to prioritize protecting these private-school options for all students,” she said.

But there are also warnings about the limits of choice school enrollment growth.

Quinton Klabon with the Institute for Reforming Government said choice schools will soon face the same demographic challenges that traditional public schools are facing.

He said the “baby bust” from the 2008 recession has arrived, and all schools will see enrollments fall because there are simply fewer school-aged children.

“School choice supporters and opponents alike have projected rapid, continued growth, but new data suggest the programs are affected by declining birth rates, school participation, or parent choices,” IRG noted.

“School choice supporters cannot be complacent,” Klabon said. “Informing parents, expanding high-quality schools, and protecting schools from hostile red tape are high priorities. Otherwise, the baby bust will close choice schools.”

The new enrollment numbers show Milwaukee’s choice program added 235 students this year.

Racine’s school choice program lost 14 students, and the state’s special needs choice program gained 419. But it was the statewide school choice program that saw the largest enrollment increases. The Wisconsin Parental Choice Program added 1,814 students this fall.

Voters Oppose Transgender Surgeries

Sharp Decline in Trans-identifying Youth Between 2023 and 2025, Report Says

A sharp decline in Gen Z Americans identifying as transgender and queer has occurred, from 6.8% identifying as a gender other than male or female in 2023 compared to 3.6% stating so in 2025, according to a report.

The report’s author, professor of Politics Eric Kaufmann, told The Center Square he thinks this drop in transgender young people “signals one of the first shifts away from progressive non-conformity of lifestyle and self-expression in 60 years.”

Kaufmann told The Center Square: “I believe we could be at the start of a gradual change toward a more post-progressive society, somewhat more socially conservative – or at least not as socially radical.”

Kaufmann also said to The Center Square that “there are many” implications to his report.

“First, that social influences are an important factor in the rise and decline of trans, queer and bisexual identity among young people since the 2010s,” Kaufmann said.

“Second, that gender and sexual identity seems to operate relatively independently of politics and culture war attitudes among young people,” Kaufmann said.

For instance, in an X post on the subject, Kaufmann wrote that the shift in queer and trans identification is not actually due to the youth becoming “less woke, more religious or more conservative,” because “those beliefs remained stable throughout the 2020s.”

Kaufmann told The Center Square that his third and final listed point on the implications of his report was “that improving mental health is connected to this trend [of declining Gen Z transgenderism], though only partially.”

Better mental health certainly appears to play a part in the decline in trans and queer identifying young Americans, as “less anxious and, especially, depressed, students [are] linked with a smaller share identifying as trans, queer or bisexual,” Kaufmann wrote on X.

Kaufmann additionally noted to The Center Square that “it does not appear that these shifts are related to social media consumption patterns.”

Interestingly, as Kaufmann wrote on X, “freshmen in 2024-25 were less trans and queer than seniors whereas it was the reverse when BTQ+ identity was surging in 2022-23,” suggesting that “gender/sexual non-conformity will continue to fall.”

Policy director at family advocacy group American Principles Project Paul Dupont told The Center Square that the findings of Kaufmann’s report “should be seen as good news.”

“Adopting an identity at odds with one's biology is not healthy, so any report showing more people embracing their bodies rather than rejecting them is a positive development,” Dupont said.

“While it's too early to say with certainty, one hopes that this decline will make it easier to root out gender ideology from its remaining strongholds,” Dupont said.

“Many blue states and cities still allow men to access women's private spaces and sports,” Dupont said. “Many hospitals and clinics still perform gender transition procedures on minors. Many school districts still keep parents in the dark if their child is struggling with gender dysphoria.”

“All of these policies must be repealed wherever they are still in force, and having more members of Gen Z acknowledge biological reality will only help hasten that process,” Dupont said.

Dupont advised that “advocates for sanity should be cautious not to declare victory yet.”

“Although we are making progress, gender ideology remains entrenched in many powerful American institutions, and Democrats have refused to moderate one inch in response to their election loss last year,” Dupont said. “There is still a difficult road ahead.”

Much of the information going into Kaufmann’s report came from raw data found in the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression’s (FIRE) annual survey of college students – the College Free Speech Rankings Survey – with more than 60,000 polled in 2025.

As stated by Kaufmann in an article on his report, “just 3.6% of respondents [to FIRE’s survey] identified as a gender other than male or female,” in 2025.

“By comparison, the figure was 5.2% in 2024 and 6.8% in both 2022 and 2023,” Kaufmann wrote. “In other words, the share of trans-identified students has effectively halved in just two years.”

FIRE told The Center Square that its survey “looks at student attitudes for free expression and is conducted for that purpose.”

FIRE explained that “as a side effect of asking demographic questions of so many respondents (68,000 this year), one can glean trends in demographics as Prof Kauffman has done here.”

“We make our data available to the public for free on this page to encourage academics or members of the public to dive in and see what findings they're able to uncover beyond the analyses that we ourselves are able to run,” FIRE told The Center Square.

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