Pedophile Priest Used Boulder Junction Cottage As Lair To Abuse Boys

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Posted on 5th April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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A Roman Catholic priest who admitted to molesting more than 200 deaf boys at a school near Milwaukee continued to sexually abuse youths when he was transferred to far northern Wisconsin, according to a story in The New York Times Saturday. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/03/us/03wisconsin.html?hp

In the latest chapter in the outrageous case of the Rev. Lawrence Murphy, The Times wrote that the pedophile priest used his family’s cottage in Boulder Junction, on Trout Lake in the Northwoods of Wisconsin, as the setting to lure and abuse youths.

The tragedy, and shame, is that the Archdiocese of Milwaukee had sent Father Murphy to northern Wisconsin after learning that he was abusing boys at St. John’s School for the Deaf in St. Francis, outside Milwaukee. The priest was transferred in 1974 to the Diocese of Superior, when he was 48, supposedly to retire.

But based on documents cited by The Times, Father Murphy didn’t retire from being a pedophile. He used his family’s quaint rural lakefront home as the bait to attract boys, where he could then be with them alone and make his sexual advances.

The story quotes Donald Marshall, who said he was in his early teens when he met Father Murphy in the late 1970s. Marshall was in a juvenile detention center, the Lincoln Hills School for Boys, where Father Murphy sometimes acted as a chaplain.

Marshall alleges that the priest molested him, and the now 45-year-old West Allis, Wis., resident has filed suit against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. Marshall has served an eight-year term in prison for drunken driving, and has a history of problems with anger and alcohol.

Other men who alleged they were molested by Father Murphy in northern Wisconsin are also quoted in The Times’ piece.

The Times caused a stir last week when it first wrote about Father Murphy’s case. It reported that the bishops in Milwaukee and Superior had tried to get the priest defrocked, but that there efforts were derailed after the Vatican got a letter from Father Murphy seeking leniency.

The Church wasn’t the only one to fail Father Murphy’s victims. Police in Milwaukee were brought allegations about the priest. In Sunday’s story, then-District Attorney E. Michael McCann said that the charges were beyond the Wisconsin’s statute of limitations.

Plea deal reached in Wis. homicide-torture case

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Posted on 8th August 2008 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/6/2008 10:17 PM

By SCOTT BAUER
Associated Press Writer

PORTAGE, Wis. (AP) _ A man charged with killing a woman and torturing her young son as he led a gang of violent identity thieves entered into a plea agreement Wednesday that could keep him behind bars for the rest of his life.

Michael Sisk, 26, faces up to 136 years and three months in prison, but will be sentenced to less than the maximum with extended supervision under a state sentencing provision. To a count of second-degree reckless homicide he entered an Alford plea, which means he did not admit guilt but said the prosecution has enough evidence to obtain a conviction. He pleaded guilty or no contest to nine other counts.

Sisk’s attorney, Ronald Benavides, said the plea deal arose after a Wednesday afternoon hearing on a series of motions filed in advance of Sisk’s trial, which was to have started Monday.

Prosecutors say Sisk killed Tammie Garlin, 36, who was found buried outside the house Sisk and others rented in Portage, a sleepy town of about 9,700 in south-central Wisconsin.

A message left after office hours with Columbia County District Attorney Jane Kohlwey was not immediately returned.

Investigators believe Sisk and his gang, including Garlin, crisscrossed the country with their young children, stealing people’s identities and running small-time scams.

Police looking for the 2-year-old daughter of gang member Candace Clarke, kidnapped from her Florida foster parents, tracked the gang to the rental house where Garlin’s body was found in a shallow backyard grave in June 2007.

They found the kidnapped girl, and found Garlin’s son — then 11 — in the closet streaked with blood.

According to a criminal complaint, the boy told detectives that everyone in the gang, including his sister and mother, burned him with hot water and whipped him with an extension cord as punishment. Sisk beat him with a board with a nail in it, he said.

The case spurred an outpouring of sympathy for the boy across the country and forced the Florida Department of Children and Families to reform its system and assign specific workers to track missing children.

Sisk, Clarke, 24, gang member Michaela Clerc, 22, and Garlin’s now-16-year-old daughter were charged with a host of counts, including being a party to child abuse and first-degree intentional homicide. Clarke and Clerc struck plea deals over the past year, and the teen’s case has been moved into juvenile court.

Patti Seger, executive director of the Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence, called the case sad.

“You just don’t hear about this combination of folks all traveling together with kids where everybody is sort of participating in abusing each other,” Seger said. “Somebody killed that woman and somebody hurt that little boy.”

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Associated Press writer Todd Richmond contributed to this story.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

Drunk driver hurts 4 at Sheboygan Brat Fest

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Posted on 4th August 2008 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/2/2008 5:51 PM

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. (AP) _ A drunken driver led deputies on a high-speed chase Saturday before barging through a parade route and injuring a total of four people, none seriously, authorities said.

The injured included two women and a 6-year-old boy. Parade bystanders were holding the 24-year-old driver on the ground when deputies arrived, said Sheboygan County Sheriff’s Capt. David Adams.

Deputies received a call Saturday morning reporting an erratic driver on Interstate 43, Adams said.

The man headed into Sheboygan, a city on Lake Michigan between Green Bay and Milwaukee, at speeds as high as 80 mph.

His car hit a police captain in the leg before jumping a curb and careering into the route of a parade that was part of an annual bratwurst celebration. The captain was treated and released.

The suspect has not been charged.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.