Monday, April 29, 2024
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Monday, April 29, 2024

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

Evers’ DOC Kept FREE a Triple Shooter Parolee After He Committed New Crimes on Parole; Then He Chokes Woman

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Since 2019, Gov. Tony Evers’ Parole Commission has released hundreds of convicted criminals, freeing them early on parole mostly into Wisconsin communities, including more than 300 murderers and attempted murderers, and more than 47 child rapists.



Timothy Jones is an attempted killer with a violent past who committed multiple new crimes while out on parole. Basically he went on a new crime spree. But Tony Evers’ Department of Corrections left Jones on the street even after he committed a string of new crimes a mere month after being released on a discretionary parole – and a court commissioner gave him a signature bond!

Unbelievably, in 2020, Jones was given a signature bond by Dodge County Court Commissioner Steven Seim; Jones then committed a second new crime a month after that, this time choking and punching a woman, chipping her tooth, after crawling through her window and threatening her. Only then was his parole finally revoked. DOC is directly under Evers’ authority.

One of the criminal complaints says Jones told the victim he did not fear any  “consequences.”

In the domestic strangulation incident, he said “he’s not afraid of any consequences, he will get what he wants” and “if you call cops I will hurt you all.” He told the victim’s roommate “I’m not afraid to die and I know you are but I could make it happen faster for you.”

A 1992 article in the Capital Times explained that Jones, then 25, committed multiple attempted murders in Dane County. He shot three people in two different incidents. None of them died.

He was convicted in two 1991 shooting incidents and was sentenced to 50 years in prison. In the first case, he shot two men outside Antler’s Tavern. He had propositioned a female bartender and one of the men had “intervened on her behalf.” He was also charged with reckless injury for shooting a man outside a party. He was already a felon robber and firearm offender who had been paroled previously, the newspaper reported.

Timothy jones

The victim shot outside the party, Walter Cowan, was 4 to 6 feet away from Jones when Jones pulled out a pistol and fired. The bullet grazed his head.

In the tavern shooting, the victims were David Winburn and Tracy Wardell.

Jones “pulled out a gun and shot Winburn in the chest, then walked toward him, and Winburn managed to kick the gun out of Jones’ hand,” according to a 1991 article in the Capital Times. Jones got his gun back and, as Wardell struggled with him, he shot Wardell in the stomach. A person hit Jones over the head with a bottle.

Fast forward to 2020, and Jones is freshly released on parole, and he immediately proves – twice – that he is still a danger to society.

“It is clear to this Court that society needs to be protected from him,” the judge said in the 2020 sentencing him for the choking case. “As much as he may say that he has learned the lessons, the best prediction of future activity is a person’s past actions. He drinks to the point of intoxication and does not only do dangerous things, he threatens people.” Read the sentencing transcript here: Transcript of May 2 2022 Resentencing Hearing 2020CF62

Here’s the timeline.

Jones was paroled on March 3, 2020, by Evers’ appointee John Tate, according to state Department of Corrections records. Evers then reappointed Tate a year later, saying he was pleased to do so. This was a discretionary parole.

It took Jones exactly one month to commit a new crime, but there’s no evidence DOC revoked his parole for it. In fact, he was released on a signature bond.

On April 3, 2020, according to a Dodge County criminal complaint obtained by Wisconsin Right Now, Jones was charged with felony fleeing an officer in Beaver Dam, obstructing an officer, driving after revoked, and possessing drug paraphernalia.

The officer said, “Timothy fled when I attempted to stop him and when he stopped, he took off on foot. I arrested Timothy for eluding, resist/obstructing, possession of drug paraphernalia, operating after revocation due to OWI, and a probation hold. I issued Timothy citations for speed, fail to stop at stop sign, fail to stop for a flashing red light, and operating left of center,” according to the complaint. In addition to a vehicle pursuit, Jones led the officer on a foot chase.

Timothy jones

His license was revoked due to an OWI.

The complaint says he was living in a local hotel but did have a job. The complaint noted, “I also saw Timothy was on parole for (attempt) first-degree murder, endangering safety with a weapon, and felon in possession of a firearm. Dispatch contacted parole and advised them of the events that occurred. Parole said they were going to place a hold on Timothy.” He had marijuana in his sleeve, the complaint says.

Read the complaint here: 2020CF000081 Criminal Complaint_1 – Jones, Timothy L.pdf 1786447

Unbelievably, Jones was still on the streets to re-offend AGAIN in May 2020. This time, he was accused of felony strangulation and suffocation as a domestic abuser and repeater and substantial battery – domestic abuse, disorderly conduct, criminal damage to property, criminal trespassing, and bail jumping.

The crimes happened in the City of Markesan. According to the criminal complaint:

The victim said she was at her house with her boyfriend, who was Jones, and her family. Jones began doing shots of Jack Daniels with her mother. He became intoxicated. She went to wake him up and helped walked him to her car. He puked all over the car.

Once they got into Timothy’s apartment, she tried to help him get the dirty clothes off, but he “backhanded her so hard that she fell off the bed to the ground.” She went to leave, but Timothy ran over and slammed the door and grabbed her. He told her “that he has a gun and isn’t afraid to use it.”

When he went to the bathroom, she was able to grab her things and ran out of the apartment and drove home.

An hour later, she heard Jones outside her bedroom window screaming and pounding on the glass. He then crawled through a window into her house. She told him to leave but he wouldn’t. He “grabbed her neck and attempted to choke her.” Her mother was there and grabbed Timothy’s hand away.

A neighbor came over to help, but Timothy struck the victim in the face and mouth, chipping her tooth. The neighbor got him out of the house, and he stood screaming for 15-20 minutes.

At the bail hearing, in Green Lake County, the prosecutor told the judge that the victim feared for her life and safety.

Read the criminal complaint here:

Complaint.2020CF62

The prosecutor explained,

“He is currently on parole from a 1991-CF-1169 case out of Dane County where he was convicted of two counts of attempted first degree homicide, endangering safety by use of a dangerous weapon, and a felon in possession of a firearm. He was paroled on March 3rd of 2020. He had to go serve a few days in jail in Milwaukee for an old OWI ticket. He was released from Milwaukee County March 7. Since then he has picked up a fleeing, resisting, OAR, and possession of drug paraphernalia in Dodge County. That case is open and pending. He also has prior convictions in a 1991-CF-1168 case out of Dane County for
second degree reckless injury as a repeater; an 89-CF-892705 out of Milwaukee County for felon in possession of a firearm; 88- CF-882314 for a theft; and there are three older convictions in the ’80s, from ’85 and ’86, that I am not certain what the charges are but there were — or the dispositions at this point in time.”

At that hearing, the state asked for bail to be increased from $5,000 to $10,000. However, by that time, he was already on a parole hold, and he remained in custody after that point, according to court records.

Read the bail hearing transcript here: Transcript of May 8 2020 Bond Hearing.2020CF62

On Dec. 2, 2020, Jones was “returned from parole” and incarcerated in state prison again, according to DOC. He is currently incarcerated at New Lisbon Correctional Institution.

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Wisconsin Pro-life Groups Tell Supreme Court There’s No Right to Abortion

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s pro-life groups are unified in telling the Wisconsin Supreme Court it is not the court’s job to create a right to abortion.

Wisconsin Right to Life, Wisconsin Family Action and Pro-Life Wisconsin all filed a joint brief with the court that argues there is no right to abortion and add that if there is to be one, that decision is up to lawmakers.

“The Supreme Court is not the proper venue to create health and safety law nor the proper mechanism to add a constitutional amendment. The legislature is the proper body to weigh the policy considerations and create law, not the court,” Wisconsin Family Action president Christine File said.

“Finding a right to abortion in our state constitution, where there clearly is none, would be the most extreme form of legislating from the bench,” Dan Miller, state director at Pro-Life Wisconsin, said. “The U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled in Dobbs that there is no federal constitutional right to abortion. Nothing in Wisconsin’s constitution or the history of our state would remotely suggest such a right. We implore the Wisconsin Supreme Court to reject Planned Parenthood’s radical and self-serving plans.”

Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin in February asked the Wisconsin Supreme Court to decide if there is a right to abortion in the state.

The Supreme Court has accepted the case, and the filing from Wisconsin’s pro-life groups is in response to that case.

The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty also filed a brief in the case.

“There is no right to an abortion in Wisconsin’s Constitution. No judge, justice, or lawyer should be creating policy for Wisconsinites out of thin air. Reversing Roe v. Wade through the Dobbs decision rightfully placed the abortion issue back where it should have been all along – in the halls of state legislatures,” WILL Deputy Counsel Luke Berg said. “That’s where the debate and conversation must remain.”

The court is expecting responses from everyone involved in the case by today. The court has not said when it expects to hear oral arguments.

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Prosecutors Begin Laying Out Case Against Trump to Jury

Federal prosecutors on Monday began laying out what they say is election fraud in 2016 by former President Donald Trump.

Trump, 77, is the first former U.S. president to be charged with a felony. Prosecutors and defense attorneys presented their opening statements to the jury of five women and seven men.

Prosecutors said Trump corrupted the 2016 election, The Hill reported on Monday.

"This case is about a criminal conspiracy and a cover-up," Manhattan prosecutor Matthew Colangelo said. "The defendant, Donald Trump, orchestrated a criminal scheme to corrupt the 2016 election, then covered it up."

Trump will spend four days a week in court in New York for the next six to eight weeks on state charges that he disguised hush money payments to two women as legal expenses during the 2016 election. Judge Juan Merchan has not scheduled trial days on Wednesdays.

On Monday, his defense attorneys said he had done nothing wrong.

"President Trump is innocent," Trump attorney Todd Blanche told the jury. "He did not commit any crimes. The Manhattan district attorney's office should never have brought this case."

Trump pleaded not guilty in April 2023 to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.

Merchan's gag order remains in place, ordered last month before the trial began. Trump, the nation's 45th president, is prohibited from making or directing others to make public statements about witnesses concerning their potential participation or about counsel in the case or about court staff, district attorney staff or family members of staff.

Prosecutors said Trump's $130,000 payment to adult film actress Stormy Daniels was falsely covered up as a business expense, that the money was to help keep her quiet. Prosecutors say they had a sexual encounter.

Prosecutors also said Trump paid Karen McDougal, a Playboy magazine "Playmate," and reimbursed then attorney and fixer Michael Cohen to cover it up.

"This was a planned, coordinated, long-running conspiracy to influence the 2016 election, to help Donald Trump get elected through illegal expenditures to silence people who had something bad to say about his behavior," Colangelo said. "It was election fraud, pure and simple."

Reuters reported that Blanche countered that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg should have never brought the case to trial.

"There's nothing wrong with trying to influence an election" Blanche said. "It's called democracy. They put something sinister on this idea, as if it's a crime."

Prosecutors say Trump falsified internal records kept by his company, hiding the true nature of payments that involve Daniels ($130,000), McDougal ($150,000), and Trump's former personal lawyer Michael Cohen ($420,000). Prosecutors say the money was logged as legal expenses, not reimbursements. In a reversal of past close relationships now pivotal to the prosecution against him, both Cohen and Daniels are expected to testify.

Under New York state law, falsifying business records in the first degree is a Class E felony that carries a maximum sentence of four years in prison.

Even if convicted and sentenced to jail, Trump could continue his campaign to return to the White House. He's facing the Democratic incumbent who ousted him in 2020, 81-year-old President Joe Biden.

Trump faces 88 felony charges spread across four cases in Florida, Georgia, New York and Washington.Trump has said the criminal and civil trials he faces are designed to keep him from winning the 2024 rematch versus Biden.

Waukesha County DA Declines Charges in Brandtjen Campaign Finance Case

(The Center Square) – Another local prosecutor declined to bring charges against a Republican state lawmaker in a campaign funding raising case.

Waukesha County’s District Attorney Sue Opper said she would not file charges against state Rep. Janel Brandtjen. But Opper said she is not clearing Brandtjen in the case.

“I am simply concluding that I cannot prove charges against her. While the intercepted communications, such as audio recordings may be compelling in the court of public opinion, they are not in a court of law,” Opper said.

Wisconsin’s Ethics Commission suggested charges against Brandtjen and a handful of others in a case that investigators say saw them move money around to allegedly skirt Wisconsin’s limits on campaign donations.

Opper said the Ethics Commission investigation was based on “reasonable suspicion and then probable cause.” But she added that those “burdens are substantially lower than proof beyond a reasonable doubt which is necessary for a criminal conviction.”

Opper said the Ethic Commission could pursue a civil case against Brandtjen and the others. She also opened the door to other investigations.

“This decision does not clear Rep. Brandtjen of any wrongdoing, there is just not enough evidence to move forward to let a factfinder decide,” Opper said.

She’s the fourth local prosecutor in the state to decide against filing charges.

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Brad Schimel Says He Won’t Repeat Mistakes of Last Supreme Court Race

(The Center Square) – Judge Brad Schmiel says he’s not going to repeat the mistakes of the last supreme court race in Wisconsin.

Schimel told News Talk 1130 WISN’s Jay Weber he isn’t going to politicize the race like liberal Justice Janet Protasiewicz, and he’s not going to ignore his campaign like former conservative Justice Dan Kelly.

Schimel said he can run for the court next year without injecting Republican politics into the court.

“I've had plenty of people on our side that suggested ‘Brad, you just got to do the same.’ No. I cannot do that,” Schimel said. “We still have to respect the rule of law. We still have to respect the Constitution. We still have to respect judicial ethics. I'm not going to go out and promise people what I'm going to do. But I will promise people that they can look at my record, and they know that I've done the right thing. That I have put the law above politics. I put the law above my own personal opinions.”

Republicans roundly criticized Protasiewicz for her comments about abortion and Wisconsin’s state legislative maps during the 2023 campaign.

Republicans also roundly criticized former Justice Dan Kelly, who lost to Protasiewicz, for his perceived lack of campaigning.

“We couldn’t have put a brighter, more reliable conservative on the Wisconsin Supreme Court than Dan Kelly,” Schmiel added. “But, with the campaign there were some mistakes that were made.”

Chief among them, Schimel said, was Kelly’s decision to reject money from the Wisconsin Republican Party that could have gone toward TV ads.

Schimel said that left Kelly at a huge disadvantage.

“Janet Protasiewicz took almost $10 million from the state [Democratic] Party. Dan took the money too late. He realized ‘Oh my gosh, I'm going to get burned on this.’ By the time he took it the best ad buys were gone, and he wasn't able to spend the money effectively,” Schimel said. “He spent $585,000 on TV. That was what his campaign spent. Janet Protasiewicz’s campaign spent $10.5 million. When you are out-spent 20-to-one on TV, you better just start writing your concession speech.”

Schmiel vowed not to be outspent this time around.

“I have made it clear. I will take all legal, ethical contributions to my campaign because we have to win,” Schimel said. “Because we have to stop standing on this hill of principle that we end up dying on.”

Defund NPR

Multiple Bills Introduced in Congress to Defund NPR

Several U.S. House Republicans introduced multiple pieces of legislation to defund National Public Radio following new allegations of “leftist propaganda” from the taxpayer-funded news source.

House Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good, R-Va., Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., and Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y., introduced similar legislation to prohibit federal funding for NPR, including barring local public radio stations from utilizing money from federal grants to “purchase content or pay dues to NPR.”

Over the years, Republicans have made multiple attempts to defund NPR, citing similar complaints. The latest outrage follows an editorial from former NPR Editor Uri Berliner, who criticized the news source claiming it had "lost America's trust."

Berliner criticized NPR’s coverage of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, the COVID-19 lab leak theory and of Hunter Biden's abandoned laptop as examples of the outlet’s left-leaning bias. He described “the most damaging development at NPR: the absence of viewpoint diversity.”

Banks took aim at NPR’s new Chief Executive Officer Katherine Maher, who has expressed criticism of the First Amendment in efforts to combat “misinformation.”

“NPR’s new CEO is a radical, left-wing activist who doesn’t believe in free speech or objective journalism. Hoosiers shouldn’t be writing her paychecks. Katherine Maher isn’t qualified to teach an introductory journalism class, much less capable of responsibly spending millions of American tax dollars,” said Banks.

The Indiana congressman continued by describing the news outlet as a “liberal looney bin” under prior leadership, drawing attention to a systemic problem.

“It’s time to pull the plug on this national embarrassment. Congress must stop spending other people’s hard-earned money on low grade propaganda,” Banks lamented.

Good was a bit more reserved in his take-down of the news outlet.

“It is bad enough that so many media outlets push their slanted views instead of reporting the news, but it is even more egregious for hardworking taxpayers to be forced to pay for it. National Public Radio has a track record of promoting anti-American narratives on the taxpayer dime,” Good said in a news release. “My legislation would ensure no taxpayer dollars are used to fund the woke, leftist propaganda of National Public Radio.”

Tenney, a former newspaper owner and publisher, accused NPR of using taxpayer funds to “manipulate” and promote a political agenda controlled by “left-wing activists.”

"I understand the importance of non-partisan, balanced media coverage, and have seen first-hand the left-wing bias in our news media. These disturbing reports out of NPR confirm what many have known for a long time: NPR is using American taxpayer dollars to manipulate the news and lie to the American people on behalf of a political agenda. It’s past time the American people stop footing the bill for NPR, and the partisan, left-wing activists that control it," Tenney said in a news release.

The lawmakers cited the political make-up of the NPR’s D.C. news team, which they say includes 87 registered Democrats and no registered Republicans.

The Center Square uncovered records showing that Maher exclusively donated to Democratic political candidates before her role at NPR. Her largest donation of $1,500 was given to Virginia Congressman Tom Perriello in 2017, and most frequently donated to Virginia state Sen. Jennifer Carroll Foy, in the amounts of $25 over nine times.

Good underscored the original purpose for the publicly funded news outlet, which he says was “created to be an educational news source and to ‘speak with many voices.’” He added that NPR has now become “a primary outlet for advancing biased and radical media coverage of political and social issues.”

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