Boots & Sabers

The blogging will continue until morale improves...

Month: April 2016

Around the Bend by Judy Steffes

Liz Kryst tabbed as speaker at WB Memorial Day ceremony

West Bend’s Memorial Day ceremony will have a huge impact on neighbors in the community as Elizabeth (Liz) Kryst has stepped forward as the guest speaker.

Liz is the mother of Kevin Kryst, a 1997 West Bend West High School graduate who was a Captain in the Marines when he was killed in Iraq on Dec. 18, 2006.

“I’ve done speeches before at the Veterans Administration,” Liz said. “I thought certainly I’ll bring a different perspective.”

Sitting at her kitchen table at the family home on Seventh Avenue, Liz did not mince words when she said the focus of her presentation will be on “Memorial Day for a parent.”

“It sucks,” she said. “If he had died or been hit by a bus, any other place other than the military it would have drifted off into the sunset, but every year I have this reminder.”

A gold star banner hangs in the front window of the Kryst home. Photos of the family’s six children are scattered throughout the first floor.

Liz, 64, is blunt in her conversation. “It’s almost been 10 years and I still can’t listen to Taps,” she said.

“After a couple years it got too hard to be sad. You just have to turn everything around and you just have to keep moving forward because I’ve seen other people fall back and dig deep holes.”

Living in West Bend since 1993, Kevin Kryst was first deployed to Iraq in 2004.

Just a couple weeks into his second deployment as a Marine helicopter pilot was when Kevin Kryst died from injuries due to being hit by a fragment of a mortar.

“He died while protecting his Marines,” said Liz. “Kevin was totally dedicated to the Marines.”

A crucifix hangs on the wall behind Liz. She said she leaned heavy into her faith while dealing with the death of her oldest son and well after.

“If I didn’t have the kind of faith I have I probably wouldn’t have gotten this far,” she said. “Some people cope differently but the ones that cope the best are the ones with faith.”

Captain Kryst was buried with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery in July 2007.

The U.S. flag, presented to the family, rests on a shelf behind a glass case in a cabinet in the living room.

Three of six of the Kryst children are or were Marines. ‘That’s a very unique perspective from every point of view,” said Liz. “I don’t expect people to really understand but I want to get across that people should not just remember those who have died but also have respect for the families left behind to pick up the pieces.”

An American Gold Star mother, Liz will make her presentation on Memorial Day dressed in a white uniform.

Part of her speech, she said, will include history on the organization that was started after World War I by a woman in Washington who was grieving the loss of her son.

There are 27 women in Wisconsin that are officially American Gold Star mothers including Virginia ‘Belle’ Wichlacz of West Bend; she’s the stepmother of Marine Lance Cpl. Travis Wichlacz, 22, who was killed in action Feb. 5, 2005 while serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Liz Kryst said as a rule, she will not ride in the Memorial Day parade.

W.B. Memorial Day details

The Memorial Day parade in West Bend will step off at 9:30 a.m. on Monday, May 30 and head north from South Main Street and Oak Street to Hickory Street and back down Sixth Avenue to Poplar Street. A ceremony will follow in the old Courthouse Square. That program begins at 11 a.m. and will feature World War II veteran Allan Kieckhafer as master of ceremonies. Other tributes will include a tribute to the American flag, Preamble of the Constitution, Gettysburg Address, a reading of the poem “In Flanders Field” and performances by the West Bend High School Band and the River City Irregulars. In case of inclement weather the ceremony will move into the second floor chambers at the Old County Courthouse.

Mobil station on E. Washington St. sold

The Mobil station, 1610 E. Washington Street in West Bend, has been sold. Owners Curtis Yahr and his son Steven have sold the property to Bob Yahr. “Steve bought another gas station on Highway 83 in Hartland,” said his brother Bob. “My dad and I bought the one on E. Washington Street and Schoenhaar Drive.” The Yahr’s closed on the property April 22, 2016 for $1.2 million.

Mark Piotrowicz to be appointed acting Director of Development

The city of West Bend is appointing Assistant Director of Development Mark Piotrowicz as acting Director of Development. A vote to approve will be at Monday’s council meeting.

The appointment comes as the city regroups following the resignation of former city administrator T.J. Justice who is facing felony charges after allegedly “sending provocative text messages to a teenage girl for nearly a year — including offering her money for sex” according to a criminal complaint.

Piotrowicz is no stranger to the interim position. He held it from 2011 – 2012 prior to Justice being hired. West Bend assistant city administrator Amy Reuteman has already been tabbed as the new interim city administrator.

Rezoning property at Highway 33 and Valley Dr.

There’s going to be a public hearing at Tuesday’s West Bend Plan Commission meeting involving a request to rezone approximately 11.2 acres located west and east of Valley Avenue on the south side of W. Washington St. The property is currently zoned B-3 Neighborhood Business, B-6 Office Park, RM-4 Multi-Family Residential, and temporary Districts to B-4 General Business & Warehousing District. The rezoning request is being made by property owner Steve Kearns and Audrey Bohn.

There’s also going to be a request for a site plan to build a new 3,840-square-foot commercial multi-tenant building on Wildwood Road, just south of Stein’s Garden & Home. State Farm agent Mike Sacotte is the one behind the project and there’s going to be a site plan for the placement of an art sculpture near the Police Department entrance, 350 Vine Street.

Two delegates from Washington Co. headed to RNC

Washington County Republican Party chairman Jim Geldreich and Kathy Kiernan were recently elected as delegates to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland.  There are only 24 district delegates from Wisconsin and Washington County has two of them.  The other 18 at-large delegates were just chosen by the governor and state Senator Duey Stroebel got one of those spots, for a total of 42 delegates.

“By rule of the state constitution, we have to vote for Cruz unless he unbinds us, or gets less than a third of the total delegate vote on any subsequent ballots,” said Geldreich. “If that happens, we are technically free to vote for whoever we want.”  Geldreich and Kiernan will leave July 16; the convention is July 18-21. This is Geldreich’s second national convention; he was at the 2012 as an alternate.

St. Mary’s athletic items for sale

St. Mary’s Athletics is selling all remaining basketball, volleyball and cheerleading uniforms on Saturday April 30 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at St. Mary’s gym, 406 Jefferson St., West Bend. Basketball and volleyball jerseys are $5, gym shorts are $2, and full cheerleading uniforms are $15.  All proceeds will go to a charity, organization or group determined by the St. Mary’s Athletic board. No equipment or trophies will be sold.

Rep. Bob Gannon circulating papers

Local Assembly Rep. Bob Gannon (R-Slinger) is circulating election papers for the Nov. 8, 2016 General Election. Gannon represents District 58. He was first elected to the Assembly in 2014. Gannon has until June 1, 2016 to collect 200 signatures. Gannon defeated Tiffany Koehler and Sandy Voss in the Republican primary in 2014. He was uncontested in the last General Election.

Coffeeville Co. prepping to open in Jackson

After 20 months of dedication and hard work to preserve Jackson’s history, Coffeeville Company is nearing completion at N168W20101 Main Street. It’s a coffee house with bakery and all the goodness you might expect to find in a log cabin turned homey hangout.

The osprey hath returneth

It looks like the mighty osprey will have the best seat in the house this season for the unveiling of the new Silver Lining Amphitheater at the Washington County Fair. A heap of sticks in the form of a nest can be seen atop the U.S. Cellular tower overlooking the Fair Park.

Osprey have been making a nest there since 2011.  A neighbor called in an eagle sighting about a week ago. There was a bald eagle spotted in March on the side of Highway 45 just a stone’s throw from the Eisenbahn State Trail about 2 miles north of County Highway D.

Linda Olson retires after 35 years with Wash. Co. Aging

After working 35 years in Washington County, Aging and Disability Resource Director Linda Olson is retiring. “My first title with the county was Senior Citizens Program Director,” said Olson. “We had four people in our office including two clerical, a benefits specialist, and the elderly nutrition director and myself.”  Over the years that Office on Aging has grown to 22 people.

Olson remembers county board members Reuben Schmahl and Ken Mueller. “I learned a lot from them as well as supervisor George Frank who was the chairman of the Aging Committee,” she said.

Olson was recognized during this week’s 2016 Senior Conference at the Washington County Fair Park. “When we first started we had 12 vendors and held it at Cedar Ridge,” said Olson. “Today we had 81 vendors and about 340 people in attendance. Olson’s last day will be June 8. She said she’s going to “enjoy the summer” in retirement and then figure out what to do.

Updates & tidbits

There’s a free Shred Fest today, April 30, from 9 a.m. – noon at Thrivent Financial, 810 E. Paradise Drive in West Bend. Items are being collected for Support the Troops Wisconsin.

-Get bargain tickets for The Well Pennies concert Friday, May 6 at the West Bend Silver Lining Arts Center. Mention this post and get two adult tickets or four student tickets for $15.

The West Bend Water Utility will be performing bi-annual city-wide flushing of the water system the week of May 1 – May 6. If neighbors experience discolored water, flush the cold water line for about 10 minutes.

-Historic Barton Business Association is hosting a Brat Fry at The Sign Shop on May 7. Live music will be provided by Mike Sipin and the gang.

– The West Bend High School’s Synchronized Swim Team’s annual show “Dancing with the Dolphins” is Saturday April 30 at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m.

– The West Bend Judo Club will host its 44th annual tournament Saturday, May 7 at UW-Washington County. Judo instructor, Jon Sanfilippo will make a special presentation to Lynn Roethke, two-time Olympian and 1988 Silver medalist. Roethke was recently promoted to 8th degree Black Belt by USA Judo. At 55 years old, she will be the youngest Judoka promoted to that rank and also becomes the highest woman Judoka currently alive in the U.S. The West Bend Judo Club present a set of 3 real Samurai Swords to show a direct connection of Judo to its martial warrior roots of Japan.

– During Monday’s West Bend Common Council meeting watch for the appointment of Ald. Williquette, Ald. Chris Jenkins and a citizen to the Long Range Transportation Planning Committee in addition to existing members Ald. Hutchins and Ald. Kasten.

-Approve the Creation of the Human Resources Director Screening Committee and Appointment of Members.

– Open Book in West Bend at the city Assessor’s Office runs through May 11. It is the informal review process for assessment values.

– Senator Duey Stroebel is holding 10 town hall stops around the district: Monday, May 2 at 6 p.m. – Slinger Community Library and 7:30 p.m. at Hartford City Hall. Monday, May 16 at 5:30 p.m. at Campbellsport Public Library and 7:30 p.m. at West Bend Community Memorial Library

Janalee Bach has opened a new business, Wood N’ Art, at 111 N. Sixth Street in West Bend above Slesar Glass. Wood N’ Art is an instructor-led art studio that helps create custom-wood signs. An open house is being held April 30.

Honor Flight vet Kenneth Steiner: I Have No Regrets           Article courtesy Hope Sanders

Eighty-year-old Kenneth Steiner served in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War, married, raised a family, retired at age 75 and says he has ‘no regrets.’ On May 14 he will be on a plane to Washington D.C. as an Honor Flight recipient with his oldest daughter, Kimberly, by his side.

Steiner enlisted in the Air Force at age 17 because “I knew I’d have to sign up for the draft for the Army and being given an enemy rifle and throw me in the freezing cold didn’t sound like a good idea to me, so I thought I’d learn something in the technical skills in the Air Force.” Steiner felt the Air Force “had more options.”

A 17-year-old cousin was also influential in Steiner’s enlistment having joined the Air Force just over a month prior to Steiner. The cousin wrote to Steiner and told him the Air Force “wasn’t too bad” and encouraged Steiner to consider it.

Steiner served in the U.S. Air Force Military Air Transport (MAT) from 1953 to 1957; he was based out of Dover, Delaware and assigned Commissioning Chief then Crew Chief for the last year.

Steiner was also a part of the flight crew that “flew for the UN, England, Canada” because at that time we had a “C124-B which was the only large cargo plan that was available. We could carry like 200 people plus all their machine guns and everything. Or we could take a fire engine and drive it right in front and load it up. We could carry like 48 tons.”

Steiner has seen his share of the world having flown to “Greenland twice, then Brazil, every state in the Union, Canada, Europe, France, England, Azores, North Africa, India, Ascension Islands, Trinidad. So basically, everything but the Pacific.”

“Everybody needed our aircraft, “said Steiner. “Because I was single and I really didn’t care where I went most of the time, you know, some of the missions I didn’t know where I was going. They’d give you a passport when you got on board your plane because you couldn’t call home.”

“It was quite an adventure for a 17-year-old kid,” Steiner concluded.

Steiner attained the rank of Staff Sergeant one year before he ended his term of service in 1957.

Asked if there was any specific memory he would like to share, Steiner offered, “I got to see the Taj Mahal before it was opened up to the public. It was rather outstanding. I saw a lot of things people will never see… I was in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and the Sudan. You can’t even go there anymore. We were constantly on the move.”

“I didn’t think much about it [time in service] until this opportunity [Honor Flight] came up; then the memories started flowing back, “said Steiner. “For my part, it was all positive.”

Steiner encourages young men to talk to local recruiters to “find out what the possibilities are because “I had no regrets” citing two cousins that made a career out of their military service, one who was a head pilot for the Thunderbirds.

Steiner met his wife just after he got out of the Air Force in the fall of 1957; together they raised a family of two daughters and one son. The opportunity to participate in the Honor Flight program “brings back memories,” said Steiner, “It’s bringing everything back to me. You know, you just kind of go through that military service and go on with your life.”IMG_6717

Guest Column: “Breaking through Bureaucracy”

Here’s a guest column from Joshua Schoemann, the Washington County County Administrator.

If you’ve had time to see local newspaper headlines lately, or you’ve thumbed through the newsfeed of your favorite social media app, you may be inclined to be a bit pessimistic.  Do not be dismayed my friends, there is plenty to be optimistic about here in Washington County!

While doing some work this past week in preparation for a visit by Governor Walker, we took a long overdue tour of the building affectionately referred to as the “Old Courthouse.”  Many of you may know this building as the current home of the Washington County Historical Society.  Others may recall the building from days gone by as the place where you picked up your marriage certificate, birth certificate or conducted other county business.  However, if you see this building today, one can hardly pass through the walls of the gorgeous relic and not feel the history surround you.

In admiring the interior of the building during my visit that day I couldn’t help but wonder what those who came before us would think if they could see us now.  I could almost hear them saying, “Look how far you’ve come! This community (our County) has so much going for it. What was once a small rural outpost between Milwaukee and Fond du Lac is now a beautiful rural suburban haven, close enough for commerce and culture yet far enough for peace and tranquility. You have so much opportunity!”

As I stepped out of that beautiful building and sat down to write this month’s column I did so with a new found energy and optimism.  This community is in fact extremely blessed.  The opportunities for innovation and improvement are almost endless.  We have so incredibly much to offer to ourselves and those who one day will call Washington County home.  We have fantastic schools, just take a look at our national rankings, and our state test scores.  We have a wonderful network of nonprofits supporting a quality of life for all citizens of our County.  We have terrific natural resources.  Where else can you go where you live 30 minutes from the hustle and bustle of the big city, and yet are surrounded by beautiful woods, marshes and farm country? We have a superb business community with incredibly generous corporate citizens.

Picture for yourself the beauty of the Romanesque Revival architecture of our “Old Courthouse”.  Now consider, if you will, what it must have took to build that wonderful structure back in the late 1880’s.  I can tell you this, it wasn’t done by any one person alone.  The only way such an amazing building was erected at that time in history was by the collective effort of hundreds of people dedicated to making their community one beautiful piece of Wisconsin.

We have so incredibly much going for us in Washington County.  Now we need to take the collective work of the hundreds of thousands of us who call this place home to build whatever the next “old courthouse” is going to be.  In the words of John F. Kennedy, “One person can make a difference, and everyone should try.”

Milwaukee Applies for Grant to Extend Choo Choo

It’s not even built yet and they want to dump another $20 million into it.

The city of Milwaukee applied for a $20 million federal grant to extend the streetcar line approximately 1.2 miles to the new Milwaukee Bucks arena.

The city will find out in mid-September if the grant is approved.The new line would build a track between the Milwaukee Intermodal Station on St. Paul Avenue north to Fourth Street and Highland Avenue.

Ghassan Korban, commissioner of the Department of Public Works, said the city is confident the  grant will be approved.

“Overall, we’re obviously excited for this opportunity to get closer. As we’ve always stated, the original route of 2.1 miles needs an extension for it to be meaningful,” Korban said. “This gets us closer to the Bronzeville neighborhood, or to Walker’s Point, one mile at a time.”

China Denies Port Access to U.S. Carrier

Terrific.

(CNN)China has denied a U.S. aircraft carrier entry into a Hong Kong port, according to Pentagon spokesman Cmdr. Bill Urban.

“We were recently informed that a request for a port visit by a U.S. carrier strike group, including the USS John C. Stennis and accompanying vessels, to Hong Kong was denied,” he said. “We have a long track record of successful port visits to Hong Kong, including with the current visit of the (command ship) USS Blue Ridge, and we expect that will continue.”

It was not immediately clear why the Stennis was denied port access.

A spokesman for the Hong Kong Security Bureau declined to comment on the decision, saying the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government wouldn’t comment on the individual visit application of foreign warships.

The port access denial comes just two weeks after Defense Secretary Ash Carter visited the Stennis while the carrier was operating in the South China Sea. The area is at the center of heightened tensions between the United States and China, with Beijing building and militarizing man-made islands in the contested waters.

West Bend City Administrator Resigns

Thankfully, Justice saved the taxpayers the cost of the legal process and possibly severance pay.

Today the mayor of West Bend accepted the resignation of suspended city administrator Thomas Justice.

[…]

Justice’s resignation is effective May 13.

“A legal process requires specific steps be taken to terminate an employee including a hearing and a review, etc.,” said Mayor Kraig Sadownikow.  “This process would have taken the same amount of time, if not longer – probably past May 13 with a more uncertain outcome.”

Justice had a contract with a 6-month severance payout. “We’re happy to have avoided that and are looking to moving forward as a leadership team and as a community,” Sadownikow said.

Eagles Eat Small Mammals

Apparently, some folks watching the EagleCam were unaware of that fact.

Late that afternoon, one adult was in the nest with the furry black babies when the other swooped down and dropped a sizable delivery. Clear as day, there it was: a small, limp, brown-and-white cat.

In a YouTube video of the incident, everyone looked a little puzzled for a minute, then one of the adults dragged the feline to the other side of the nest. The video cuts out at that point, so the dinner scene is left to viewers’ imaginations.

[…]

Live-cam viewers, of course, saw it all play out, and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported that some were “squeamish or disturbed.”

The Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania responded on its Facebook page with a post reminding people that nature “isn’t always kind or pretty.”

Replacing Prosser

The Capital Times has a list of likely candidates to replace the retiring Justice Prosser. Of those on the list, I like Judge Gundrum the best. He was a good egg in the legislature and has been a solid judge.

Judge Mark Gundrum, Wisconsin Court of Appeals, District II

Gundrum, a former Republican state representative, was appointed to the Court of Appeals in 2011. He served in the Assembly from 1999 until he was elected as a trial court judge in Waukesha County Circuit Court in 2010. He reportedly commuted with Walker to Madison during their time in the Legislature. He was featured on the Netflix documentary “Making a Murderer” for his involvement in creating a criminal justice reform bill after Steven Avery was exonerated for a 1985 crime. WisPolitics has reported that Gundrum will apply. He did not return a call for comment Thursday.

Feingold Won’t Reveal Primary Vote

As someone who wants a job whose primary responsibility is to take public votes on contentious issues, it seems odd that Feingold is so secretive about this one.

U.S. Senate hopeful Russ Feingold is refusing to say whether he voted for Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders in Wisconsin’s Democratic presidential primary earlier this month.

Trump’s Foreign Policy Speech

This about sums up my reaction.

The most remarkable aspect of Donald Trump’s foreign policy speech was that someone actually wrote it out and put it in the teleprompter. It was so filled with internal contradictions, falsehoods and genuinely crazy assertions that one would have thought Trump was speaking extemporaneously. It was a vivid display as to why he is thoroughly unprepared to become commander in chief.

Justice Prosser Retiring

This is unexpected.

Supreme Court Justice David Prosser, a conservative whose opinions helped solidify a series of controversial changes in state law in recent years but was also known for his physical confrontation with a colleague, announced Wednesday he would retire in July.

Prosser’s retirement comes after 18 years on the court and five years before his current 10-year term ends. Gov. Scott Walker will need to appoint a justice to replace Prosser, part of the court’s 5-2 right-leaning majority.

State law requires Walker’s appointee to serve until the next spring election that does not have a Supreme Court justice on the ballot, according to Walker spokesman Jack Jablonski, which is 2020.

Prosser is a good justice who served the people well for a very long time. Unfortunately, he has been unjustly maligned for the past several years. Wisconsin owes him a thank you for his service. He;s still young enough to have a long, happy retirement.

Cruz Taps Fiorina for VP

Good pick. The short-term political calculations are obvious, but purely as a ticket, I like the choice.

“After a great deal of consideration and prayer, I have come to the conclusion that if I am nominated to be president of the United States that I will run on a ticket with my vice presidential nominee Carly Fiorina,” Cruz said during a rally in Indianapolis.

Fiorina joined the Texas senator on stage, and Cruz’s staff changed the podium in between Cruz and Fiorina’s remarks to display a new logo featuring both their names.

“Ted could not be more right in what he said: There is a lot at stake, and in fact, this is a fight, this is a fight for the soul of our party and the future of our nation,” Fiorina said. “I’ve had tough fights all my life. Tough fights don’t worry me a bit.”

Sanders Fires Staffers

It sure looks like he’s throwing in the sponge.

(CNN)Bernie Sanders’ campaign is laying off more than 200 workers, campaign manager Jeff Weaver said Wednesday.

The campaign is downsizing from its current 550-member team to between 325 to 350 workers, said Weaver, who added that at one point the Sanders’ staff numbered more than 1,000.
The decision follows a bad night for Sanders, in which he lost four out of five East Coast states that voted on Tuesday.
“The calendar is coming closer to the end and there are not that many states going forward … it’s the natural evolution of every campaign,” Weaver told CNN.

Kansas Stops Accepting Syrian Refugees

I seem to remember our president assuring us that all of these refugees would be thoroughly vetted to make sure we aren’t letting terrorists infiltrate our nation by taking advantage of our generosity as a nation. Not so much

(Reuters) – Kansas is withdrawing from plans to resettle Syrian refugees in the state after the federal government failed to provide security information on them, Republican Governor Sam Brownback said on Tuesday.

Brownback said in a statement that he repeatedly asked the administration of President Barack Obama for documentation on the screening of refugees who would be relocated from Syria to Kansas.

“Because the federal government has failed to provide adequate assurances regarding refugees it is settling in Kansas, we have no option but to end our cooperation with and participation in the federal refugee resettlement program,” Brownback said.

But, of course, our imperial federal government doesn’t care about what states think.

Kevin Griffis, a spokesman for the federal Health and Human Services Department, said that “refugee resettlement will continue in Kansas, coordinated by non-profit organizations.”

More than 30 governors attempted to block refugees from their states, but courts and attorneys general have said that it is up to the federal government to screen refugees and settle them.

Feingold’s Slush Fund

I thought we already knew that Feingold’s Progressive United PAC was just a slush fund he set up while in the wilderness to fund his return to D.C.? Wasn’t that obvious to everyone?

Former U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold set a specific goal when he set up Progressives United PAC shortly after losing his seat to Republican challenger Ron Johnson in 2010.

Feingold, a Democrat, said he wanted the political action committee “to support candidates that will stand up to corporate influence and oppose those who blindly push the agenda of their corporate backers.”

Now the question is this: Has Feingold proved to be the primary beneficiary of that work by Progressives United PAC and its nonprofit arm, Progressives United Inc.?

It certainly appears so — whether that was the intent or not.

In important ways, Feingold’s campaign against Johnson has picked up on the successes of Progressives United Inc. and PAC, which spent a combined $10 million since 2011.

Finding Justice

My column for the West Bend Daily News is online. Here you go:

The city administrator for West Bend, T.J. Justice, has been arrested and charged with two felony counts — one for child enticement-prostitution and one for soliciting a child for prostitution. If convicted, Justice could spend the next 50 years in prison. Justice has posted bail and is on paid administrative leave from his city job until the Common Council decides what to do with him. At this point, there are more questions than answers, but the ramifications will be felt in our little city for some time to come.

According to the criminal complaint, Justice began texting with a teenage girl in May 2015. The texts were salacious, with Justice repeatedly and forcefully telling the girl that he wanted to have sex with her and was willing to pay her money for it.

In September 2015, the girl’s mother discovered the texts and responded to Justice saying, “no I’m 16, stop.” Justice responded with surprise at her age, but then appears to have continued aggressively soliciting the girl for sex with full knowledge that he was pursuing an underage girl. At one point he even allegedly texted, “your age is a turn on accept that and let’s figure this out babe.”

This February, the girl’s mother contacted the police about the situation. A Muskego police detective posed as the girl and contacted Justice to set up a meeting Thursday to have sex for $200. Justice showed up right on time with a bottle of Viagra in the car and was subsequently arrested. After first denying it, he confessed claiming that he would only have had sex with the girl if she consented — as if that ameliorates the fact that he was allegedly intending to pay an underage girl, who cannot legally consent, for sex.

Where do we go from here? As far as Justice is concerned, the criminal justice system will take care of him. It appears from the criminal complaint that the police did a superb job collecting evidence and the likelihood of conviction is high. Hopefully the next time we hear from Mr. Justice is in 50 years when the girl is collecting Social Security and our grandchildren are arguing over where to place a released nonagenarian sex offender.

As for the city of West Bend, there are a lot of questions that need to be answered and city leaders will need to find a replacement while caring for city employees reeling from the news. If the criminal complaint is true, it is clear Justice is a rotten human being and a predator. It is possible that he was a master manipulator and successfully concealed his rottenness from friends and coworkers. That has certainly happened in the past where horrible people manage to appear perfectly normal in polite society.

It is also possible that signs were overlooked, or worse, covered up. We already know that Justice lied on his application for city employment, saying that he had a college degree when he did not. At the time, the Common Council and mayor considered that fact against his record of achievement and decided to forgive that transgression. Since Justice has been a city employee, were there other transgressions? Were there complaints? If so, what happened? Are there more victims?

One thing that jumps out from the criminal complaint is how brazen Justice was. He used his own phone and name while openly soliciting a teenage girl he had never met. It was either incredibly stupid or incredibly arrogant. While it is possible that Justice was able to hide his hideous behavior, the shameless way in which he behaved in soliciting a child makes it difficult to believe that this was the first and only incident.

As I said, there a lot of questions and it has been less than a week since Justice was arrested. While we must push for answers, we must also be patient as people work through the legal and procedural issues. Since this is a personnel issue with the city, some information won’t be forthcoming for some time, which will be frustrating. And there will be those who oppose the current city leadership who will seek to use this for their own political advantage. We must be discerning in separating fact from fiction.

This incident also serves as another in a long line of reminders that parents must monitor their kids’ online behavior. It is not about trusting your kids. It is about not trusting people like Justice who may be preying on them.

Obama Administration Denies “No Boots on the Ground”

Wow. They aren’t even trying to be creative with the lies. They are just flat out lying and expecting all of us to buy it.

Lee: For months and months and months, the mantra from the president and everyone else in the administration has been, “No boots on the ground,” and now —

Kirby: No, that is not true.

Lee: What?

Kirby: It’s just not true, Matt.

Lee: It is. It’s true!

Kirby: No it’s not. I just flatly, absolutely disagree with you.

UW Faculty Moves Forward on Vote of No Confidence

It’s funny to watch liberals fight with each other.

Written by sociology professor Chad Alan Goldberg, who has been among the most vocal faculty members in calling for strong tenure protections, the resolution declares the Faculty Senate has no confidence in Cross or the Regents to “protect tenure and shared governance.”

Cross and the Regents have come under fire from professors and others for how they have handled the 2015-17 state budget, which cut $250 million from the UW System’s funding, weakened the faculty’s role in governing universities and made it easier to fire tenured professors.

Speaking at a meeting of the Faculty Senate’s executive committee Monday, however, Blank said she strongly opposes the no-confidence resolution, and encouraged the faculty to instead adopt a “milder” statement.

“The backlash on this will be potentially very real,” Blank said, “particularly as we’re going into a budget year where the number of people who are looking for reasons to cut UW-Madison is uncomfortably high. This gives them those reasons.”

Family Systematically Executed in Ohio

Wow. Scary.

The victims, aged 16 to 44, were methodically shot in the head while sleeping at four residences, including a mother with a 4-day-old infant lying beside her, authorities said. The newborn, along with a 6-month-old and a 3-year-old, survived. The official said the killings happened before dawn.
“This was a preplanned execution of eight individuals,” DeWine said. “It was a sophisticated operation and those who carried it out were trying to do everything they could do to hinder the investigation and their prosecution.”
The killer or killers were specifically going after the Rhoden family, Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader emphasized, though he didn’t say why.
“I cautioned them they are a target and I cautioned them, ‘Be armed,’ ” he said.

The Clinton Cash Machine

It’s pretty clear that the next potential POTUS used the State Department as a cash machine to shake down foreign governments for personal gain. Unfortunately, she did so by helping arming some pretty reprehensible regimes.

Under Clinton’s leadership, the State Department approved $165 billion worth of commercial arms sales to 20 nations whose governments have given money to the Clinton Foundation, according to an IBTimes analysis of State Department and foundation data. That figure — derived from the three full fiscal years of Clinton’s term as Secretary of State (from October 2010 to September 2012) — represented nearly double the value of American arms sales made to the those countries and approved by the State Department during the same period of President George W. Bush’s second term.

The Clinton-led State Department also authorized $151 billion of separate Pentagon-brokered deals for 16 of the countries that donated to the Clinton Foundation, resulting in a 143 percent increase incompleted sales to those nations over the same time frame during the Bush administration. These extra sales were part of a broad increase in American military exports that accompanied Obama’s arrival in the White House. The 143 percent increase in U.S. arms sales to Clinton Foundation donors compares to an 80 percent increase in such sales to all countries over the same time period.

American defense contractors also donated to the Clinton Foundation while Hillary Clinton was secretary of state and in some cases made personal payments to Bill Clinton for speaking engagements. Such firms and their subsidiaries were listed as contractors in $163 billion worth of Pentagon-negotiated deals that were authorized by the Clinton State Department between 2009 and 2012.

The State Department formally approved these arms sales even as many of the deals enhanced the military power of countries ruled by authoritarian regimes whose human rights abuses had been criticized by the department. Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman andQatar all donated to the Clinton Foundation and also gained State Department clearance to buy caches of American-made weapons even as the department singled them out for a range of alleged ills, from corruption to restrictions on civil liberties to violent crackdowns against political opponents.

Sanders Going Through to California

That’s a change. Notice that he’s not vowing to go through to the convention anymore.

“We’re not giving this thing up,” the self-described democratic socialist said. “We’re going all the way to California. But if she is the nominee, I would hope that she puts together the strongest progressive agenda that says, ‘Yes, we’re going to stand with the working families in this country. We are prepared to take on the fossil fuel industry and the drug companies Wall Street and the billionaire class.’ And if she has a candidate for vice president who is prepared to carry that mantle, prepared to engage in that fight, I think that would be a very good thing for her campaign.”

On NBC’s “Meet The Press,” Sanders focused on the present.

“We are in this race. We are not writing our obituary. We’re in this race to California,” he said, before letting a tense change slip. “And we’re proud of the campaign we ran.”

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