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Monday, May 12, 2025

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Judge Susan Crawford Helped Gut Plan to Monitor ‘Wisconsin’s Worst Sex Offenders’

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The change “takes away most of our ability to track these monsters. I’m left with my jaw wide open” – state Rep. Scott Suder

Judge Susan Crawford helped gut a state law that would have provided lifetime monitoring of the state’s “worst sex offenders,” Wisconsin Right Now has documented. The leftist Madison judge is now running for a seat on Wisconsin’s Supreme Court.

The sex offender monitoring issue came up when Crawford worked as executive assistant to then Gov. Jim Doyle’s Corrections Secretary, Matt Frank, according to newspaper articles from the time, obtained by Wisconsin Right Now through archival research.

“Susan Crawford, executive assistant to Corrections Secretary Matt Frank, said the governor and the agency have concluded GPS tracking isn’t a good tool for monitoring sex offenders who are no longer under government supervision,” a Feb. 15, 2007 article by Todd Richmond of the Associated Press says. It ran in newspapers throughout Wisconsin.

Judge susan crawford

In contrast, her opponent in the Supreme Court race, former Republican Attorney General Brad Schimel, who is a Waukesha County Judge, has produced legal interpretations to allow the lifetime monitoring, as the debate has continued even into this year.

As AG, Schimel argued that “anyone convicted of multiple counts of a sex offense was a repeat offender and automatically fell into the lifetime-monitoring category,” according to the Capital Times. That opinion by Schimel paved the way for lifetime monitoring of sex offenders who were convicted of multiple counts in a single case and was based on a 2005 law.

According to the Capital Times, there are 1,500 sex offenders on lifetime monitoring.

Wisconsin’s sex offender registration statute requires “lifetime registration when a ‘person has, on 2 or more separate occasions, been convicted . . . for a sex offense,'” a 2023 court decision reads. Three liberal justices and Justice Brian Hagedorn formed the majority; they interpreted that passage to the favor of sex offenders.

The liberal-controlled court ruled that a sex offender could not be ordered to wear GPS monitoring for life in such instances because “separate occasions” did not refer to multiple counts stemming from the same case. The decision was so extreme that even Gov. Tony Evers-run Department of Corrections has been working with Republican legislators to rewrite state law so that sex offenders can be subject to lifetime monitoring again, despite that decision.

Schimel’s election in April would shift the control of the court in favor of conservatives. Crawford’s would solidify the liberal majority.

As a judge in Dane County, the leftist Crawford has pledged to utilize “alternatives to incarceration,” and support the expansion of “diversion programs” that give offenders “a chance to avoid a conviction.” In one case, she gave a convicted child molester only four years in prison when he could have served more than 100; he is already out on the streets despite molesting two girls, ages 6 and 7, in a Middleton swimming pool.

Wisconsin Right Now has taken the lead in analyzing Crawford’s record.

And it turns out that she was part of an effort to scale back the lifetime monitoring of sex offenders during the tenure of a different governor, Democrat Jim Doyle. Crawford’s leftist approach to criminal justice extends far back in time.

The AP article reported that Doyle’s budget proposal in 2007 “dramatically scaled back” electronic tracking “for Wisconsin’s worst sex offenders.” It was a bill that Doyle had signed less than a year before.

The articles make it clear that Crawford wasn’t just a bystander in Doyle’s decision to gut the sex offender monitoring law because she used collective voice in describing the analysis of it.

Judge susan crawford

Doyle had signed the bill before switching and moving to scale it back during his budget proposal less than a year later. Asked why Doyle didn’t realize the concerns before he signed it, Crawford told the Associated Press, “It took a lot of analysis on our part. The bill went through the Legislature rather quickly.” That’s even though the AP said the bill “spent about 10 months in the Legislature. The governor signed it four days after he got it.” Doyle was running for re-election when he signed it. Crawford held a number of top roles in Doyle’s administration over the years.

Republican State Rep. Scott Suder, who authored the law, told the news media at the time that Doyle’s change “takes away most of our ability to track these monsters. I’m left with my jaw wide open. He signed the bill. He highlighted the bill throughout his campaign. Now he is nothing short of gutting this bill. I find it appalling.”

Judge susan crawford
Judge susan crawford and jim doyle.

Doyle’s plan also allowed Corrections to choose “passive monitoring” of sex offenders instead of “active monitoring.” Active monitoring sends “real-time updates” of the offender’s location and in passive monitors a list “of the offender’s locations” could be downloaded from when the tracker was recharged, according to a 2007 article in the Capital Times by the AP.

Scott suder
Scott suder

Crawford told the media that there were “defects” in the law.

The original law would “set up GPS tracking” until a child molester or sexually violent offender died “or was too feeble to pose a threat,” the article stated. Doyle scaled that back to require them to wear the GPS bracelets “only while they’re on supervised release or parole.” Offenders “on lifetime supervision” would be subject to lifetime tracking, the AP reported.

The about-face came after three UW-Madison professors complained that the new state law “violates privacy rights,” according to an Associated Press article from Feb. 8, 2007.

The law would force “sexual predators to wear tracking devices for the rest of their lives,” according to the article.

The professors, Walter Dickey, Byron Lichstein, and Meredith Ross, labeled the law an example of “governmental intrusion into personal privacy.”

Jim doyle
Jim doyle.

In that article, Suder, of Abbotsford, called the professors “Monday morning quarterbacks” with weak arguments who “might want to talk to the victims of these crimes before they make such outrageous statements. Nothing is going to stop us from implementing GPS. We are on very solid constitutional grounds.”

The law required the Department of Corrections “to use global positioning technology to track offenders found to be sexually violent. Tracking would begin when they’re released from prison and continue for the rest of their lives. The requirement would also extend to serious child molesters,” the AP reported.

The professors also expressed concern for the sex offenders, writing, “constant lifetime GPS tracking is physically and psychologically burdensome.”

Only one member of the state Assembly voted against the law, according to the AP, then state Rep. Mark Pocan, a Democrat who is now a U.S. congressman.

At the time, Crawford was the executive assistant for Corrections Secretary Matthew Frank.
The AP reported that Crawford said, “Corrections has run into a myriad of problems as it prepares to implement the bill.”

An article in the Republican Eagle from 2007 put it this way:

“Gov. Jim Doyle no longer wants to monitor Wisconsin’s worst child sex offenders once they’ve done their time. The new state budget Doyle gave legislators this week only requires GPS satellite tracking of offenders while they’re on parole or supervised release.

Susan Crawford, state corrections’ official, has said her department cannot make sex offenders wear the tracking devices once they’ve paid their debts to society. And it would not do much to stop them from re-offending anyway, because it would only produce evidence after the fact.”

“Suder had accused the corrections’ agency of staging” the professors’ complaints, “something the department has denied,” the article said.

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Should Feds Require ‘Intellectual Diversity’ Among University Faculties?

Through more than 140 executive orders, President Donald Trump in his first 100-plus days in office has used his signing pen like a battering ram to undo sometimes decades-old policies and practices that have shaped the federal government, including in public and higher education.

On day one, the administration banned diversity, equity and inclusion programs from federal agencies and institutions receiving federal funding, targeting schools like Harvard University that refuse to comply with his policies. But Trump also is attempting to move schools away from such practices by requiring them to hire for “viewpoint” or “intellectual” diversity – a move that has been met with varying degrees of skepticism and support.

The administration included such terms in both its list of demands to Harvard and in an executive order on reforming accreditation in higher education.

Among the 10 demands outlined in a letter from the administration to Harvard in April, it directed the university to facilitate an audit of the “student body, faculty, staff and leadership” for “viewpoint diversity” and to submit that audit to the federal government.

“Each department, field, or teaching unit must be individually viewpoint diverse,” the letter reads.

The university is to hire or admit for viewpoint diversity until a “critical mass” is reached in each arena.

Within a handful of recent executive orders on education was one meant to hold accreditors accountable for “unlawful discrimination in accreditation-related activity under the guise of ‘diversity, equity, and inclusion’ initiatives.”

“A group of higher education accreditors are the gatekeepers that decide which colleges and universities American students can spend the more than $100 billion in Federal student loans and Pell Grants dispersed each year,” the order reads.

The order accuses accreditors of prioritizing “discriminatory ideology” in accreditation standards over strong graduation rates, return on investment and other important criteria. As an antidote, the order commissions the secretary of education with devising new accreditation standards, including one that requires institutions to “prioritize intellectual diversity among faculty in order to advance academic freedom, intellectual inquiry, and student learning.”

Heather Mac Donald, a scholar at The Manhattan Institute who’s written on a number of topics over the years, including higher education, is supportive of the goal but thinks the means are “problematic.” Mac Donald authored "The Diversity Delusion: How Race and Gender Pandering Corrupt the University and Undermine Our Culture" in 2018.

“I agree with the substantive critique entirely. I think universities are the enemy of Western civilization,” Mac Donald told The Center Square. “They are perpetuating an ideology of hatred and of ignorance. They are betraying their fundamental obligation, which is the pursuit of truth, by embracing a one-sided, ignorant understanding of the West’s contributions and its relative position regarding other civilizations.”

In addition, Mac Donald believes universities have discriminated against certain racial groups for years.

“The universities have been blatantly discriminating against whites, white males, Asians, Asian males. They’ve introduced grotesque double standards for admissions and hiring,” she said.

Despite her numerous and serious critiques of contemporary American universities, she thinks a mandate from the federal government for intellectual diversity represents bureaucratic overreach. The administration’s demands to Harvard were provided mostly on the basis that the university has violated discrimination laws through expressions of and responses to anti-semitism on campus, she said.

“We are a government of limited powers. It’s true that the government does oversee civil rights violations under Title VI, but it’s a stretch to say that what’s going on with the left-wing bias in academia constitutes a civil rights violation that the Trump administration has the authority to correct by withholding funds,” she said.

“As necessary as it is to make a course correction, I don’t think that we should be doing so in a way that will justify further left-wing incursions,” she added.

The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression has also been critical of how the administration has gone after Harvard, saying it has flouted the lawful procedure for resolving such issues, despite also being critical of Harvard at times. But Tyler Coward, the foundation’s lead counsel on government affairs, isn’t as quick to oppose the administration’s mandate in the executive order on accreditation.

“We’re still thinking of what it looks like in practice for accreditors to have some sort of mandate for institutions to show ideological diversity. We at FIRE think that ideological diversity is a good thing. In its best form, it helps foster a true learning environment, a true marketplace of ideas that we expect our universities to be,” Coward told The Center Square.

While the executive order may appear heavy-handed, Coward said the government’s relationship with accrediting institutions has already occupied a kind of gray space for a long time.

“The government is the one empowering these accreditors in the first place. The reason these accreditors exist is because the government licenses them to exist. So it’s this weird thing where the government is involved sort of but not really, and so what is the appropriate response from the government if things aren’t going well. These are age-old tensions,” Coward said.

Scott Yenor, a scholar with California-based think tank The Claremont Institute, thinks, like Mac Donald, that American universities have strayed far from their original purpose and need correcting.

“This is a classical liberal solution with kind of non-classical liberal means,” Yenor told The Center Square.

Yenor agrees that universities need to be a marketplace of ideas but believes most no longer are, and he thinks the administration’s attempt at requiring it might be a step in the right direction.

“I don’t know that there’s any other way of actually achieving intellectual diversity besides a demand that you achieve it,” Yenor said. “The government has been doing that when it comes to racial diversity, and always with the justification that increasing racial diversity will actually increase the intellectual diversity on campus.”

“What the Trump administration is doing is what has been done for a long time already, which is making explicit demands for ideological diversity but more direct than the indirect way it’s been done on racial stuff.”

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SCOTUS Decision on Religious Charter Schools Will Carry Widespread Ramifications

In a case that could have major implications for the American public school system, the U.S. Supreme Court is considering whether religious charter schools, which are taxpayer-funded, are constitutional.

The St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School v. Drummond case involves a 2023 decision by the Oklahoma Statewide Virtual Charter School Board to allow St. Isidore to join the dozens of charter schools in the state.

Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond sued the charter school board, arguing that allowing St. Isidore to join the public charter school program amounts to state-sponsoring of religion.

The Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled in Drummond’s favor, but St. Isidore is arguing before the Supreme Court that contracting with the state to provide free and public education options as a privately run entity does not mean its religious activities constitute “state actions.”

Lori Windham from Becket law firm, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of St. Isidore, told The Center Square that a major question in the case is whether charter schools are closer to traditional public schools or instead function as private schools that are eligible for public funds like scholarships.

“There are already a lot of programs that taxpayers fund for things like federal student loans or federal scholarships that go to religious schools and non-religious schools alike,” Windham said. “Funds to help disabled students, funds to help schools have better security measures to prevent school shootings and hate crime – those go to religious schools and non-religious schools alike.”

“So in that way, this charter school isn't so different from lots of other programs that are out there where many different people can come in and ask to be part of that program, regardless of whether they're religious or not,” she added.

Though identifying as a Catholic school, St. Isidore accepts nonreligious students and does not require a statement of faith. Accordingly, the school also argues that an exclusion of St. Isidore from the state’s charter school program, simply because it is religious, violates the First Amendment’s free exercise clause.

“When you have a generally available program, you can't kick out religious people or religious groups just for being religious. You have to allow them to compete on the same basis as everybody else,” Windham told The Center Square. “And that's the main argument that the charter school is making here, that they're just trying to compete for that charter on the same basis as any other private group who wants to start running a school as part of that program.”

If precedent is any indication, St. Isidore has a high chance of winning the case. In 2022, the Supreme Court overturned the state of Maine’s ban on state tuition assistance to students attending religious schools.

But if SCOTUS does rule in Drummond’s favor, other areas where religious students and schools are currently receiving state funds – such as assistance for students with disabilities – could be jeopardized.

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U.S. Attorneys in Border States Charge 1,220 With Immigration Crimes in a Week

In one week, U.S. attorneys for four border states charged more than 1,220 defendants with immigration crimes.

The Trump administration is prosecuting illegal entry and illegal reentry cases in accordance with federal law. The base sentence for illegal reentry is two years in federal prison. Those with felony convictions who were previously deported face up to 10 years in prison, and those convicted with aggravated felonies face up to 20 years in federal prison.

The greatest number of illegal foreign nationals charged, nearly 600, were in Texas, followed by 329 in Arizona, 169 in California and 133 in New Mexico.

In the Southern District of Texas, 216 cases were filed from April 11 through 17. The majority, 119, face illegal entry charges; 11 involve human smuggling; 86 face felony illegal reentry charges after previously being deported, with the majority having felony narcotics, firearms or sexual offense convictions.

Juries also recently handed guilty convictions and indictments in human smuggling cases, including smuggling of children and possessing child sexual abuse material.

In the Western District of Texas, federal prosecutors filed 378 immigration-related criminal cases from April 11 through 17. Those charged also include convicted felons who were previously deported multiple times. Their convictions include lewd or lascivious acts with a child under age 14, assault causing bodily injury, DWI, possession of a controlled substance, domestic assault, aggravated assault, among others.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona charged the next greatest number of 329 over the same time period. The most were charged with illegal entry, 179, followed by 130 with illegal reentry and 18 with “smuggling illegal aliens” into Arizona.

One was charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding a Border Patrol agent. One Mexican national was arrested after refusing to register with the federal government after being arrested for driving under the influence and previously being deported five times.

Many charged were previously deported, including a Latin Kings and MS-13 transnational criminal gang member who’d been deported seven times and convicted of racketeering and conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

In another case, an alleged human smuggler was charged after authorities uncovered a scheme using the Telegram phone app and burner phones to recruit alleged smugglers in the U.S. to travel to the Arizona-Mexico border to drive illegal border crossers to Phoenix. In another case, a Mexican national was arrested after illegally reentering the U.S. after he was previously deported and convicted for trafficking heroin.

The next greatest number charged, 169, were in California. The Southern District of California filed 135 border-related cases, including for “transportation of illegal aliens, bringing in aliens for financial gain, reentering the U.S. after deportation, deported alien found in the United States, and importation of controlled substances.”

Prosecutors are prioritizing charging drug and firearms offenses, drug, firearm, and human smugglers, those with serious criminal records, those with active warrants, and those who endanger and threaten the local communities and law enforcement officers, the office said.

In a separate case, four indictments were unsealed charging 16 people in San Diego County with distributing large quantities of methamphetamine, fentanyl and heroin and laundering the drug-trafficking proceeds. In a coordinated takedown, more than 115 federal, state and local law enforcement officials executed search warrants and made arrests in three San Diego neighborhoods after a 16-month investigation.

Using court-authorized wiretaps, undercover agents and confidential sources, the investigation uncovered a distribution network of drugs, including fentanyl, throughout the U.S., including in Ohio and Kansas. The San Diego County-based drug trafficking organization used shell companies to gather and launder the proceeds from other states, including Colorado, Minnesota and Nebraska, according to the indictment.

In the Central District of California criminal charges were filed against 34 defendants for illegal reentry after they’d been previously deported. Many are felons with domestic violence, unlawful sex with a minor and assault with a deadly weapon convictions, are registered sex offenders, and served prison time.

In one case, four illegal foreign nationals were charged with stealing $10,000 in cash from a victim at a gas station in East Hollywood after following the victim from a Los Angeles bank branch. Law enforcement officers engaged in a high-speed pursuit, eventually caught them even after two bailed out and fled on foot. Officers recovered the $10,000 hidden in one defendant’s underwear as well as several fake passports.

In the District of New Mexico, 133 were charged with immigration crimes. The most, 68, were charged with illegal reentry after deportation, 55 with illegal entry and 10 with “alien smuggling.” Many charged are felons convicted of possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person, aggravated driving under the influence and possession of a forgery writing/device.

“Enhanced enforcement both at the border and in the interior of the district have yielded aliens engaged in unlawful activity or with serious criminal history, including human trafficking, sexual assault and violence against children,” the U.S. Attorney for New Mexico said.

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Wisconsin Taxpayers Would Pay $2,229 More If Tax Cuts Expire, Report Says

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin taxpayers will see a tax increase of, on average, $2,229 per filer if the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act expires Jan. 1, according to a new report from the National Taxpayers Union.

If the bill expires, it would increase taxes for 80% of Americans, the report says.

The largest tax increases would hit people in Massachusetts ($4,848 annual tax increase), Washington ($4,567) and California ($3,768).

If the cuts are extended, it is projected to cost the federal government about $4 trillion in revenue.

If the legislation expires, it will cut in half the federal standard deduction, reduce child tax credits, reintroduce higher federal tax brackets and lower the threshold for federal estate taxes while cutting several business tax benefits.

“Wisconsin does not adopt full expensing business investments,” the report says. “State policymakers could adopt 100% full expensing regardless of whether federal full expensing is renewed.”

If the cuts expire, individual and business taxes would go up $500 billion each year while reducing the federal gross domestic product 1.1% and wages by 0.5%, the report says.

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