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FREED: Mark Johnson, ‘Rambo Killer,’ Stabbed 15-Year-Old Boy 72 Times | Tony Evers’ Killers & Rapists #33

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.



Mark Johnson was one of them. His release was discretionary.

33rd in the series.


Mark Johnson was known as a “Rambo” killer.

In an old story, the Wisconsin State Journal reported that Johnson was convicted of first-degree murder in the “Rambo-style” killing of a 15-year-old Green Bay boy. The murder weapon was a survival knife.

The victim was Thomas Schroeder.

Johnson stabbed Schroeder repeatedly in a field on the city’s east side while the two were playing “Rambo,” a game that stemmed from the Sylvester Stallone movie.

They were neighbors. It was Schroeder’s 15th birthday.

Mark Johnson was 24 years old.

Johnson told police he “struck Schroeder from behind and then knocked him to the ground. The autopsy revealed Schroeder was stabbed 72 times.” Some of the stab wounds penetrated Schroeder’s brain.

Schroeder said “why, why?” as he was killed, according to an old story in the Green Bay Press-Gazette.

Johnson started striking Schroeder “in the face with the 6-inch knife.”


Evers’ Parole Commission Freed Mark D. Johnson Early

Mark johnson
Mark johnson

Date paroled: 09/22/2020 [You can run Johnson’s parole date here by putting in his name and clicking on “movement”]

Current Residence: Green Bay, Wisconsin

Age: 61

Convicted: First-degree intentional homicide

Sentence:  Life. Killers serving life sentences do not qualify for mandatory release. This parole was discretionary.


The Victim: Thomas Schroeder, 15

Thomas schroeder

Joan Schroeder told the Green Bay Press Gazette that her son was a “typical teenager” who was shy, sensitive, and “too trustworthy.”

“We loved him dearly,” she told the Press Gazette at the time. “We still do. We’re lonesome without him. We miss him dearly, terribly.”


What the Killer Did:

After the homicide, Johnson went home, threw his clothes away, washed his shoes, and hid the survival knife, old newspaper articles from the time said.

One of the stab wounds severed Schroeder’s spinal cord at the base of his brain, and two entered his brain, old newspaper articles said.

Johnson was a Little League coach and part-time delivery driver. The killer said he did not know why he decided to stab Schroeder to death.

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