Sunday, March 30, 2025
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Sunday, March 30, 2025

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FREED: James Block Told Kenosha Victim ‘Die Bitch,’ Asphyxiating Her With Knee | Tony Evers’ Killers & Rapists #6

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Since 2019, Gov. Tony Evers’ Parole Commission has released hundreds of convicted criminals, freeing them early on parole mostly into Wisconsin communities, including more than 300 murderers and attempted murderers, and more than 47 child rapists.



James Block was one of them.

6th in the series.


Christine Acevedo was a much-loved mother of three when her ex-boyfriend, James Block, asphyxiated her to death. The murder was brutal.

According to newspaper articles from the time, James Block first strangled Acevedo, but then revived her. He then put his knee on her neck and chest, asphyxiating her to death. “Die bitch,” he said as he stood over her. She pleaded for her life.

The family has published many remembrances to Christine in a Kenosha newspaper. Year in and year out, they would remember her.

James block

Christine’s daughter Patricia Logan told Wisconsin Right Now that she not find out that Block had been paroled for a year.

“He strangled and revived her and she was fighting,” Logan said. “He put his knee on her neck.”

Although she acknowledges the Parole Commission may have had old contact information for her, Wisconsin Right Now was able to find her in an hour. “I was not notified,” she said. For years, she said, the family wrote letters urging the Commission to deny the parole. Over the years, her grandmother and aunt passed away.

“I was shocked he got out,” Logan told Wisconsin Right Now. “Life is life. You took a life, you don’t get to breathe fresh air. My mother doesn’t get to breathe fresh air; why should he?”

Christine acevedo
Christine acevedo

She believes Gov. Tony Evers should not have appointed a Parole Commission chairman with this early release philosophy. “He (Evers) did not look at the full picture of what families go through,” she said, describing Block’s release as incredibly “traumatic,” reigniting PTSD that she’s struggled with since she was a 12-year-old girl suddenly informed her mother was murdered.

Tony Evers reappointed the Parole Commission chairman who freed James Block in 2021, AFTER Block’s release.


Evers’ Parole Commission Freed James Block Early

James p. Block
James p. Block

Date paroled: 07/07/2020 [You can run James Block’s parole date yourself here by putting his name in the database and then clicking on “movement”]

The released killer now lives: Kenosha, Wisconsin

Age: 60

Convicted: 1st-degree intentional homicide

Sentence: Life. James Block did not qualify for mandatory release because he was serving a life sentence. Thus, the decision to parole him was a CHOICE.James blockJames blockJames block


The Victim: Christine Acevedo, 34

Acevedo was a shipping clerk and mother of three. Logan described Acevedo as “very good to her family, to her friends. She was a worker. She was kind, caring, and she liked people.”

She enjoyed going to rummage sales with her grandmother. “My children had to grow up without a grandparent,” said Logan. “It was very sad and hard. I didn’t understand as a kid why that would happen.”

Christine acevedo
Christine acevedo

What the Killer Did:

According to a 1984 article in the Kenosha News, James P. Block asphyxiated his former girlfriend Christine Acevedo, 34, during an argument about money.

Block told a witness he choked the victim, then placed his knee on her throat or chest and said “die bitch” as she pleaded with him not to kill her, the newspaper article said.

A Kenosha News article states that Block tried to strangle her but then put his knee and foot on her chest until she was asphyxiated. He choked and revived her before kneeling on her throat.

Logan said her mother met Block at a glass factory in Waukegan where they worked.

Of the parole, she said, “It’s a let down. I didn’t feel it was right he was released. He’s 10 years older than me. I was hoping he’d die in prison. There’s nothing I can do about it now.”

She believes parole should be reserved for “drug addicts or someone who ran dope” not a brutal murderer like Block.

“My mom was my rock,” she said. After the murder, “everyone went through stress and loss. Depression and anxiety.”

She found out Block was released when she “had a bad feeling that he got out” and called the victim/witness office to ask. “I found out he had already been released for a year,” she said. “I was beside myself.”

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Report: Wisconsin Voter ID Law Hasn’t had Negative Impact on Voter Turnout

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s voter ID law has had no negative impact on voter turnout in the state since it was fully implemented, according to a new report from the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty.

Voter turnout, in fact, has slightly increased since the law went into effect. Wisconsin voters will vote on making voter ID a constitutional amendment April 1.

Democrats in the state have argued the amendment will disenfranchise voters.

The state’s current law, however, has had no negative impact on minority groups voting or Dane and Milwaukee counties.

The report found that socioeconomic factors such as poverty rates and education levels have a larger impact on voter turnout than voter ID laws.

“By analyzing decades of election data both before and after Wisconsin implemented Voter ID, we found a general rise in voter turnout, rather than the widespread disenfranchisement that critics often suggest,” said WILL Research Director Will Flanders. “Any claims suggesting Voter ID is ‘voter suppression’ are merely political scare tactics aimed at undermining faith in Wisconsin’s elections. Furthermore, it’s worth exploring whether Voter ID can actually increase turnout by strengthening confidence in Wisconsin’s election system.”

The research cited several studies that backed its conclusion across the country, with data showing that states with voter ID laws don’t have significantly different turnout than those without the law.

It also cited a Wisconsin study after the 2016 election where 1.7% said they didn’t vote because they didn’t have adequate ID while 1.4% said they were told at the polls that their ID was not adequate.

“It is well known among political scientists that individuals have a tendency to lie to pollsters regarding whether they voted or not,” the report said. “One key explanation for this is what is known as social desirability bias. In general, people do not want to ‘look bad’ to pollsters. As such, they may lie to the pollster about things that are perceived as socially undesirable, such as refraining from voting.”

Instead, WILL’s report looked at aggregate data of turnout change in the state and in key counties such as Dane and Milwaukee.

The study found that voter turnout has increased by 1.5%, on average, in the state since the law was implemented.

“This is an interesting result,” the report said. “While it is likely too large of a leap to say voter ID has increased turnout due to the correlational nature of our analysis, it seems that there is no negative relationship.”