Washington County: Infamous Killers Seek Commutations From Evers, Including Farmhand ‘Thought to Be an Illegal Immigrant’

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“I beat her up pretty bad” – Michael Fay, a convicted felon seeking an Evers’ commutation to get out of prison early

Inmates serving time in three of Washington County’s most notorious cases are seeking commutations from Gov. Tony Evers, according to DA Barry Braatz. They include two convicted killers, one thought to be in the country illegally, and a man who unsuccessfully used a “gay panic” defense after he shot and killed a local tavern owner.

The third inmate seeking commutation is a woman convicted of causing a bruised toddler’s death by neglecting to get her medical attention for an injury.

Rounding out the list of commutation requests are a 7th offense drunk driver and a man who beat his wife with a bat, admitting, “I beat her pretty bad.”

Barry braatz
Barry braatz

Braatz told WRN, “I am in the process of drafting a response to each of these applications, which I can provide you when I have completed them and submitted them to the Governor and the Commutation Advisory Board.”

Short-staffed District Attorney offices around the state are starting to receive commutation requests as a result of Tony Evers suddenly reigniting the process after it lay dormant for 25 years. We previously wrote about the Racine DA blasting Evers after she also received commutation notices from killers.

Evers chose to:

  • Allow homicide lifers to seek early release after serving 20 years, including cop killers.
  • Allow violent criminals not serving life terms to seek early release after serving 50% of their time.
  • He exempted only a few offenders, such as sex offenders and those who committed physical abuse of a child.
  • Although Evers created a board to review applications, his executive order allows his chief legal counsel to get the applications directly, bypassing the board.
  • District Attorneys are raising concern about victim notification, putting victims and their families back through the process, gutting of truth in sentence law certainty, extra work on their offices, and more.
  • Evers previously pledged to reduce the prison population by 50%.
    There is no transparency in this process. Evers has not responded to a request seeking a list of applicants, so we turned to DAs instead. There is no way for the public to easily find out who Evers releases or who applies.
  • The responsibility of notifying the DA and judge is left to inmates, not the state, in Evers’ order, and DAs can object but they can’t overrule Evers.

On May 6, DA Barry Braatz told WRN that the Washington County DA office had received these commutation notices (on May 12, he told us that he had not received any additional requests).

Kelly V. Bodoh, DOB: 09/17/1977 – 97CF400

Kelly bodohBodoh, 48, is serving a life sentence with parole eligibility in 2037. He was convicted of first-degree intentional homicide in 1998.

Evers’ new process required homicide lifers to only serve 20 years in prison before they can qualify to seek release. On April 23, the court records registered Bodoh’s commutation request.

What did Bodoh do? According to court records, “In the early morning hours of December 18, 1997, Robin Elsinger made homosexual advances on Bodoh. Bodoh believed that Elsinger had molested him a couple of months earlier when he was passed out due to intoxication. Bodoh prevailed upon his friend, Kraig Hoepner, to drive him to his grandmother’s house to retrieve a gun. Elsinger went along. Bodoh shot Elsinger at close range while the three were riding in the car. After the first shot, Bodoh shot again because he did not think Elsinger was dead. Bodoh would have fired a third shot, but Hoepner told him to stop.”
Elsinger, 40, was the owner of the R&B Tapperes tavern in Hustisford.

It was one of two cases in Wisconsin where a so-called “gay panic” defense was attempted. The jury rejected the argument.

Oscar L. Ruiz, DOB: 08/29/1973 – 07CF287

Oscar ruiz
Oscar ruiz

Ruiz is 52. He was convicted of two counts of conspiracy to commit first-degree intentional homicide, in 2009. He received 27 years in prison (13.5 confinement time for each charge run consecutively.) His mandatory release date is 2034.

A story by GM Today from the time says Oscar Ruiz “is thought to be an illegal immigrant.” He was described as a 33-year-old farm worker at the time of the crime.

“A former co-worker, Anselmo Gonzalez-Castillo, 36, is serving a life sentence for the December 2005 brutal attack on two brothers working at the Thull family farm, resulting in the death of one of them,” wrote GM Today at the time. “Roman Sanchez, 35, died as the result of massive head injuries Gonzalez-Castillo inflicted on him and his brother, Rosando Sanchez, 27, on the night of Dec. 12, 2005. Rosando Sanchez survived. According to the criminal complaint filed in the matter, the brothers were attacked by Gonzalez-Castillo while they worked on the Thull family farm in the township. Roman Sanchez died several days later in a Milwaukee area hospital.” Ruiz was accused of planning the homicide.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported at the time that Ruiz threatened Gonzalez-Castillo to get him to commit the crimes. “Ruiz and Gonzalez-Castillo were afraid they were going to lose their jobs at the Thull dairy farm because the three siblings were complaining to their supervisors about their work habits,” the complaint alleged, according to the Journal Sentinel.

“Ruiz told Gonzalez-Castillo to drive Ruiz’s van to the farm, to turn off the milking parlor lights and to ‘hit them with the piece of metal’ while wearing gloves, the complaint says,” according to JS. “On Dec. 12, 2005, Ruiz told Gonzalez-Castillo ‘today’s the day you have to do it,’ according to the complaint.

Leann L. Leszynski, DOB: 04/02/1987 – 12CF154

Washington county

She is 39. Her mandatory release date is April 2027. She was convicted of neglecting a child where a consequence is death. Many drug charges were dismissed.

Court records say that on May 1, 2012, Leszynski’s doctor’s office “contacted the West Bend Police Department. The doctor’s office informed the police department that Leszynski had called and told the person she spoke with that her daughter was unresponsive.”

An officer found the child deceased. The cause of death was “an infection that began in a cut on the child’s finger that spread throughout her body, although this was determined after an autopsy, some time after police investigation and interrogation had concluded.”

According to Fox 6, the 3 year old girl had bruising on her body that Leszynski claimed was from a clock falling on her. “The complaint also says Streicher is heavy into drugs and frequently uses Xanax, heroin, marijuana and cocaine. One witness told officers that he saw Streicher ‘blow marijuana into the mouth of Haley and tell her to inhale.'”

She received 15 years in prison in 2013. But Evers’ order allows people not convicted of life terms to seek release after serving only 50 percent of their time.

Note: Evers’ guidelines say that sex offenders and those who commit physical abuse of a child don’t qualify to seek release. But it’s unclear whether that refers specifically to charges that label the charge that way vs a neglect conviction.

Michael J. Fay, DOB: 09/11/1972 – 19CF557

Washington county

He was convicted of 1st degree reckless injury with a domestic abuse modifier and false imprisonment.

In 2020, he was sentenced to nine years in prison (other years were concurrent). He is 53. His mandatory release date is 2028.

Fox 6 wrote at the time that prosecutors said Fay “beat his wife with a baseball bat. That woman watched from the gallery with a gash on her forehead as her husband made his initial court appearance.”

Prosecutors said Fay told police, “I beat her up pretty bad” because he “was upset about having court today regarding their divorce,” according to Fox 6.

Kristine Ruppert, DOB: 01/25/1972 – 20CF407

Washington county

She is a seeking a commutation for a felony OWI 7th, according to court records.

A story at the time by WISN said that she was on probation and had a revoked license for 6th offense OWI when she drove high after huffing and caused a three-car crash in West Bend. Another driver was injured. In 2021, she received four years in prison consecutive to another sentence (which was a sentence for sixth offense OWI). Her mandatory release date is June 2027.

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Justice Rebecca Bradley Calls Courts’ Map Review Doing ‘Bidding of political masters’

(The Center Square) – A conservative Wisconsin Supreme Court justice called the courts’ decision to hear a case challenging the state’s congressional maps doing the “bidding of its political masters” rather than a proper decision.

The court sent an order stating that it would hear an appeal of a three-judge panel’s ruling not to hear the case but said that it would not hear the case on a requested expedited schedule.

“The Democratic Party bought multiple seats on this court to achieve yet another outcome unobtainable democratically,” Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote in dissent.

Bradley joined Justice Annette Ziegler in dissent against hear the case from the Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy that a three-judge panel dismissed on April 28.

“It is indeed rare that I feel compelled to object to hearing a case,” Ziegler wrote. “But here, I have concluded this is too important to stand silent. The public should be informed of the requests afoot and it should have the opportunity to stay abreast of these proceedings.

“And, of course, the briefing and arguments could cause me to conclude that this appeal was proper and relief should be granted. We shall see.”

The majority of judges took offense at Bradley’s insinuation that the decision to hear the case was politically motivated, calling the dissent “false, inappropriate, and disingenuous charges.”

“Deciding to hear a case does not reflect any weighing of the merits of any party’s claims, let alone prejudgment about who will prevail and why,” Justice Rebecca Dallet wrote. “We do not prejudge cases, and for that reason, we do not comment at this early stage on the parties’ legal theories, or try to develop arguments in favor of one side or another.”

Ziegler wrote that it was “shocking” the case would be reviewed without analysis of the jurisdiction of the case, if there is a proper claim or if there is even a right to appeal the ruling of a three-judge panel. She pointed to four other times that the Wisconsin Supreme Court had determined that the current congressional map would not be reviewed.

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Republicans Push Back Against UW System Tuition Increase Proposal

(The Center Square) – Several Republican lawmakers are upset with the University of Wisconsin System’s proposal to increase tuition by 2% a year after a 5% increase.

Sen. Patrick Testin, R-Stevens Point, went as far as saying that a pair of trustees “lied to all our faces” in committee testimony when they said that tuition would not be raised again this soon.

“Unfortunately, students and their families are the ones who will be paying the price for this dishonesty,” Testin said in a statement. “At least we now know that we can no longer take the UW Board of Regents at their word.

“My Joint Finance Committee colleagues and I certainly will not forget this betrayal when the regents and UW officials come begging to us for more money during next year’s state budget deliberations. This is simply unacceptable.”

The 2% increase for resident undergraduate tuition would be effective this fall. The university said in a press release that the increase is below the current inflation rate. The increase also includes a 3.5% increase in segregated fees, which are for student services, activities, programs, and facilities. In all, it would be a 2.5% average increase across tuition, segregated fees and room and board.

“We recognize Wisconsin families are managing rising costs in every part of their lives, and that reality informed this proposal,” Universities of Wisconsin Interim President Renée Wachter said in a statement. “This is a measured increase that helps our universities continue providing strong student support and high-quality academic experiences while keeping a UW education among the most affordable in the Midwest.”

Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Gillett, pointed out that, over the past 10 years, the system has added 2,400 non-faculty staff positions while educating 16,000 fewer students.

Wimberger said that, if the system would “eliminate their administrative bloat,” it would free up $750 million.

“UW’s leadership is continuing to pass its payroll expenses onto students and their families, when it should be cutting its massive bureaucracy and reinvesting its funds to create a more valuable student experience,” Wimberger said in a statement. “No amount of money will ever be enough for satisfy these bureaucrats, and the bright students who attend our universities are only left with a worse education.”

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Republican Lawmakers Ask For Pause in Evers’ Commutation Plans

(The Center Square) – More than three-dozen Wisconsin lawmakers want Gov. Tony Evers to pause his plan to cut sentences short for some criminals in the state.

Rep. Jim Piwowarczyk, R-Hubertus, released the letter to the governor, saying crimes victims in the state need more time and more of a voice in the process.

“Many Wisconsinites are stunned that convicted cop killers are even being considered for commutation. Cases like Ted Oswald's murder of Waukesha Police Captain James Lutz are exactly why so many families believed Wisconsin's truth-in-sentencing laws finally brought certainty and finality for victims and their loved ones," the lawmakers wrote.

Evers announced in April he is ending a pause in commutations in Wisconsin, and he is reviewing thousands of requests.

“It’s time for Wisconsin to join red and blue states across our country and finally move our justice system into the 21st Century by reforming our criminal justice and corrections systems to improve public safety, reduce the likelihood that individuals will reoffend when they enter our communities, and save taxpayer dollars in the long run,” the governor said in a statement.

Piwowarczyk said the governor's announcement not only caught families off-guard, but has created a problem for what he called "overwhelmed" state and local prosecutors who are required to abide by Marcy's Law that has protections for crime victims and their families.

“Victims and their loved ones deserve certainty, transparency, and respect from our justice system,” Piwowarczyk said. “Instead, families are being blindsided by commutation applications through social media posts and news reports. That is unacceptable. Wisconsin’s commutation process must put victims first, not reopen emotional wounds without proper notification or meaningful input.”

Piwowarczyk and the other lawmakers asked in their letter for a pause in commutations to allow lawmakers to:

● Create a robust public notification system and online tracking list for commutation applications;

● Extend victim notification periods to at least 90 days;

● Guarantee hearings that allow victims and families to be heard directly;

● Require full notification to district attorneys and sentencing judges;

● Remove all homicide offenders from eligibility for commutation consideration.

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UW-Madison Denies Access to Payments, Contract With Economic Impact Consultant

(The Center Square) – The University of Wisconsin-Madison would not release any documents related to its contract or payments to consultant Tripp Umbach weeks after the university released a document that made claims regarding the university’s statewide economic impact.

The university claimed that it does not hold the contract and that it was denying access to what it called “draft documents” related to Tripp Umbach and payments to the firm.

“The university does not hold the contract, therefore there are no responsive records,” a public records custodian wrote to The Center Square in response to a public records request. “After a thorough search, the university has determined no record exists at the University of Wisconsin Madison related to your request.”

The Center Square also requested the documents from the University of Wisconsin system administration following the public records denial.

In April, the university released a 58-page document making claims that the university makes a $38.9 billion total economic impact on the state.

Universities across the country contract with Tripp Umbach for the firm to produce similar reports, which are then used in requests for public funding or donations to the college or university.

Tripp Umbach produces reports for health care and economic development organizations along with colleges and says on its website that “our work enables leaders to make informed decisions, secure support, and implement strategies that deliver measurable results.”

Economists regularly criticize economic impact reports produced by contractors such as Tripp Umbach for not following economic principles and only including revenue figures, along with invented multipliers, in order to produce larger numbers than the real economic figures.

Sports teams also use economic impact reports when they are seeking public funding for stadiums or large events in order to convince the public and politicians that those projects are worth large public funding figures.

UW-Madison athletics leaders used a 2022 consultant report that made economic impact claims to support sending $15 million annually to the University of Wisconsin athletics departments as part of a name, image and likeness bill ultimately signed into law by Gov. Tony Evers.

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