Monday, January 20, 2025
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Monday, January 20, 2025

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Former Parole Commissioner Testified Evers Wanted Him Out Because He Was Concerned About ‘Relitigating Parole Cases’ in Public

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John Tate, Tony Evers’ two-time appointee to the Wisconsin Parole Commission, testified that the governor pushed for his resignation last spring because he didn’t want to give the Republican-controlled Legislature the opportunity to re-litigate parole cases in public.

Tate said he didn’t resign because of the case of wife killer Douglas Balsewicz, whose parole he granted before rescinding it at Evers’ request after public outcry erupted.

“I was asked to resign in anticipation of the upcoming Legislature going into a special session and litigating parole cases or re-litigating parole cases in the public sphere and at the end of that process rejecting my confirmation,” Tate revealed during August testimony at Balsewicz’s appeal hearing.

Read the transcript here.

“Oh, so the Legislature was going to take special action against you in light of that?” Balsewicz’s attorney Tony Cotton asked.

“That was what was anticipated by the administration,” Tate said.

“That was concern that he had?” asked Cotton.

 

John tate
John tate

“Yes.”

“The (governor’s) staffers when they indicated Evers’ displeasure with this decision, they had indicated to you that this is a politically difficult situation for him because you’ve granted parole to a convicted murderer. Haven’t they communicated that to you?” Cotton pressed on.

“…They’ve granted parole to a lot of people, but there is displeasure about this particular case,” Tate said.

“Right. And this one got into the news, didn’t it?” Cotton asked.

“Yes,” Tate said. Tate said he was contacted by a “bunch of reporters” and confirmed he told a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter there was no basis to rescind the parole.

Criticism “falls on your shoulders but it also falls on the governor’s shoulders because you’re a political appointee. Fair to say?” Cotton asked.

“Yes,” Tate responded.

We’ve since unearthed a series of other discretionary paroles by Tate of killers as brutal as Balsewicz. Evers has been silent on those specific cases. Many of the victims’ families say they were never notified of the parole hearings and/or paroles.

Tate also testified that he expanded his own powers as chair. Tate said he changed the process during his tenure “where every recommendation was being finalized by me. But prior to that, only recommendations for deferral or either over 12 months for grants were going to the chair.”

Tate rescinded the Balsewicz parole after Evers belatedly asked him to do so, following massive pressure from the victim’s family. He then resigned upon Evers’ request a short time later. The administrative law judge who presided over the appeal hearing is recommending that Evers’ new appointee, Chris Blythe, keep Balsewicz in prison because the victim’s daughter, Nikkole Nelson, was not notified of the parole hearing.

Tate confirmed he was named chair of the Parole Commission in June 2019 by Evers. He was appointed by the governor and never confirmed by Republicans in the state Senate, so he remained an acting chairman. He was reappointed in 2021 by Evers, after he had already released many other killers and rapists in discretionary paroles.

Tate said parole hearings are held by commissioners who make a recommendation to the chair, who has the final say. “Victims have a right to participate in those hearings,” he said.

Balsewicz decision

He said the decision to grant parole is discretionary on the part of the chair.

The notices on parole hearings are sent by the Department of Corrections’ Office of Victim Services, he said. DOC is a state agency under Evers’ authority that is led by a cabinet appointee of the governor.

The notice of parole decisions comes from the Parole Commission, Tate said. A victim notification database used to provide victims’ notification is run by the DOC Office of Victim Services, he said.

Tate confirmed he granted parole for wife killer Douglas Balsewicz after commissioner Jennifer Kramer recommended it.

Tate said he rescinded the parole after it was brought to his attention that “really one victim, in particular, had not been offered the right or offered the ability to express their right or exercise their right to participate in the parole process.”

Tate said this failure occurred because of the “effective gaps that exist within the registration process,” because the victim’s daughter was a minor when people were informed of the system for notification.

He noted that victims have a “statutory right, Constitutional right” to participate in the parole process.

Tate admitted he had conversations with Evers’ staff informing him that “the governor was going to ask for me to rescind the parole grant.”

Balsewicz received an 80-year sentence, so he was eligible for parole at year 20. However, he had been denied parole multiple times before. He stabbed his estranged wife Johanna 42 times as she lay in bed with their daughter and then left the couple’s two children with their mother’s body.

Tate admitted Balsewicz’s parole was a subjective determination.

Balsewicz completed all of his programming “many years ago,” Tate’s attorney said.

Tate said that he felt Balsewicz had served sufficient time in prison, almost 25 years of the 80-year sentence.

Tate said he did not believe there was a lack of transparency in the parole process.

He said he had multiple conversations with Evers’ staff. Tate believed there was a notification breakdown. “The administrative processes that would ensure notification for certain parties did not exist,” he said. “The system at the time is responsible.”

Elizabeth Lucas, the director of the Department of Corrections Office of Victim Services and Programs, also testified.

They are an office of eight people and provide services to victims of crime. “We provide them with notifications pertaining to their rights as crime victims,” Lucas testified.

Victims have a right “afforded to them by law” to participate in the parole process, she said.

“The victims have the opportunity to participate in the parole process if they are enrolled with the office of victim services and programs,” Lucas testified. She said victims can enroll through a local DA’s office at the time of the criminal case or by calling her office afterward.

Marsy’s law and Chapter 950 of the Wisconsin statutes both give victims a right to participate.

They are entitled to receive notice of upcoming parole hearings and decisions if they are enrolled, she testified.

Her office sends notices of upcoming parole hearings. If the parole outcome is a deferral, her office sends that notice too. If parole is granted, that notification comes from the Parole Commission, she said.

Her office keeps track of the enrollments.

There is no mechanism to enroll minor victims, she said, or to tell them about the system once they reach age 18.

Cotton emphasized that the parole was rescinded only after the “family applies political pressure to the governor with an election coming up in a few months, driving to the Capitol, meeting with the governor, imploring him to do something about this and he then writes a letter to Mr Tate scrambling to find a somewhat vague administrative code provision that doesn’t apply here.”

Family members gave heartbreaking accounts of their trauma to the hearing examiner.

“I will never forget. I will never forget the look, facial stabbing wounds, my sister lying dead on the table with 20 wounds to her neck and face,” the victim’s brother, Michael Binder, testified.

“That image has stayed with me and probably will until the day I die…. Her wounds clearly demonstrated how she fought for her life and I can only think about how scared she was as were her children as she was being stabbed 42 times.” He had been asked by his father to identify the body.

Karen Kannenberg, the victim’s sister, testified:

“I relive the death of Jo-Jo every day. These images of Doug, chasing her around that bedroom stabbing her to death. I see her fighting for her life in front of her 2 and 4-year-old children. I see the children screaming and hiding for cover, scared to death. All four of them in one room while Doug brutally stabbed Jo-Jo over 40 times.

Jo Joe was a loving, compassionate, funny and inspirational woman. She loved her family so much and her children meant everything to her. She was a great mom and just wanted to be loved.”

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TikTok Restores U.S. service after Trump Intervention

TikTok restored service to American users Sunday after temporarily shutting down in response to a Congressionally passed law upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court over its Chinese ownership.

The company said it was restoring service after President-elect Donald Trump pledged to sign an executive order to give TikTok more time to work out its ownership concerns.

"We thank President Trump for providing the necessary clarity and assurance to our service providers that they will face no penalties providing TikTok to over 170 million Americans and allowing over 7 million small businesses to thrive," TikTok said in a statement. "It's a strong stand for the First Amendment and against arbitrary censorship. We will work with President Trump on a long-term solution that keeps TikTok in the United States."

The Supreme Court on Friday ruled that the ban signed by President Joe Biden was constitutional.

"There is no doubt that, for more than 170 million Americans, TikTok offers a distinctive and expansive outlet for expression, means of engagement, and source of community," the Supreme Court said in its decision. "But Congress has determined that divestiture is necessary to address its well-supported national security concerns regarding TikTok's data collection practices and relationship with a foreign adversary. For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the challenged provisions do not violate petitioners' First Amendment rights."

The ban enacted by Biden mandated that TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, sell by Jan. 19 or be shut down.

Federal lawmakers had argued the ban was necessary to safeguard sensitive data while the Chinese-owned company's legal team argued that it violates First Amendment rights, stating officials failed to provide sufficient evidence related to those concerns.

Trump had previously petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to delay the enforcement after expressing sympathy over TikTok's position. He asked that his incoming administration address the national security concerns through "political negotiations" rather than an outright ban.

"I’m asking companies not to let TikTok stay dark! I will issue an executive order on Monday to extend the period of time before the law’s prohibitions take effect, so that we can make a deal to protect our national security," Trump wrote on Sunday. "The order will also confirm that there will be no liability for any company that helped keep TikTok from going dark before my order."

Trump also said he'd like the U.S. "to have a 50% ownership position in a joint venture. By doing this, we save TikTok, keep it in good hands and allow it to say up."

• The Center Square reporter Shirleen Guerra contributed to this report.

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DAY ONE: Here’s What Trump Could Do on His First Day in Office

President-elect Donald Trump, who is set to take office Monday, has made a series of promises of major executive actions on “day one” in office.

One of the simplest and more controversial of those “day one” plans is to pardon some of the Jan. 6 protesters currently behind bars or facing prosecution. The president has broad power to pardon, shown most recently when President Joe Biden pardoned his own son for crimes he committed or may have committed over more than a decade span.

But Trump’s “day one” executive orders are far from limited to pardons.

On energy policy, Trump has pledged to open up domestic oil drilling in a major way in an effort to lower costs for Americans and boost the energy industry. He has also promised to end a Biden-era rule that would require more than half of Americans to transition to electric vehicles over the next decade.

Trump has also consistently tapped into America’s frustration over the border crisis and broken immigration system.

Since President Joe Biden took office, more than 12 million illegal immigrants have entered the U.S., overwhelming some cities and raising national security concerns, since some migrants are on the federal terror watch list.

Trump has also promised to end transgender participation in women’s sports, something lawmakers in the House have already passed a bill to quench.

Trump has threatened “day one” tariffs as well, though it is unclear how wide-ranging those tariffs could be, since Trump likes to wield them as a negotiating tool against other nations.

On foreign policy, a ceasefire in the war between Hamas and Israel apparently has been reached, just days before Trump took office. In the Ukraine-Russia war, Trump promised on the campaign trail to put an end to that war "in 24 hours.”

In a series of campaign speeches and media interviews, Trump has promised some “day one” actions to address the border and immigration crises.

These actions include:

• Trump has plans to reinstate Title 42, a COVID-era policy that helps shut down the southern border.

• Trump has said he would also reinstate “Remain in Mexico,” a policy that Trump used during his first term that requires asylum seekers to wait in Mexico for their claim to be processed. Biden ended that policy and let migrants in and asked questions later.

• According to Politico, Trump is considering designating cartels south of the border as terrorist organizations, a policy once pushed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis when he was running for president that could open up a flood of new resources and executive powers at the border. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott designated the violent Venezuelan prison gang, Tren de Aragua, a foreign terrorist organization last year.

• Trump has threatened to end birthright citizenship for the children of illegal immigrants born in the U.S., but it remains unclear if he has the Constitutional authority to do so since birthright citizenship is enshrined in the 14th Amendment.

• Trump has made overtly clear that he plans to kickstart a massive, never-before-seen deportation program for the millions of illegal immigrants in the U.S. Trump’s appointee as border czar, Tom Homan, has been clear saying publicly that Trump named this as a top priority when choosing him for the job.

“On day one, we will SHUT DOWN THE BORDER and start deporting millions of Biden's Illegal Criminals,” Trump said over the summer during the campaign. “We will once again put AMERICANS First and MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN!”

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