Billboard in Manitowoc Demands Pardon for Wrongfully Convicted Brendan Dassey. Gov Tony Evers (D) is vested with unlimited power to grant clemency for any or no reason under Article V, Sec 6 of the Wisconsin Constitution. |
Madison, Wisconsin — There is a special place in infamy for the bystander.
Brendan Dassey is in a Wisconsin prison; he is demonstrably innocent, but lives in a state with many perpetrators and more bystanders ensuring the wrongfully convicted remain behind bars.
So, Dassey works for his freedom, his life.
Dassey and Steven Avery are featured in the Emmy-winning documentary series, Making a Murderer.
The series resulted in a worldwide campaign of supporters who work for exoneration of two clearly innocent men.
No judge who has heard Dassey's case believes he is guilty.
No cop believes in Dassey's guilt, though no Wisconsin cop will state this publicly — ever.
Two Wisconsin cops worked in bad faith — Mark Wiegert (current Sheriff of the Calumet County Sheriff's Office), and Tom Fassbender (Wisconsin DoJ, DCI
investigator (ret)) — and ripped into a 16-year-old with an I.Q. of 70, and a severe language impairment, ultimately leading to the false conviction for first-degree intentional homicide, mutilation of a corpse, and second-degree sexual assault in 2007.
Dassey was easy prey for Wiegert and Fassbender.
The prosecutor, Ken Kratz, who called himself a "dick" in 2016 (for real), self-described as suffering from narcissistic personality disorder and multiple drug addictions, was driven from the district attorney's office in 2010 after multiple allegations of sexual harassment and sexual assault came to light, after which he was driven from the Wisconsin legal profession altogether in 2019.
In the Dassey injustice, defense of Ken Kratz binds Democrats and Republicans here: A commitment to defend wrongful convictions at the hands of unethical and dishonest law enforcement.
Kratz' wife mocked and taunted Dassey's alleged conspirator, Steven Avery, in Feb 2019 in a tweet, now removed:
Writes Kratz:
One can garner much about the police culture of Wisconsin from this one tweet from an unhinged hick.Hey guys, Stevie’s still sitting in a jail cell ππ»ππ»ππ»ππ» #MakingAMurderer #MakingAMurderer2 Keep dragin ass, Kathleen. We love it! ππ— Leah Kratz (@LeahMarieKK) February 16, 2019
Consider this shared objective of destroying innocent life, a depraved devotion that cries out for constant challenge.
Last year a member of Dassey's defense team, Seth Waxman, advocating for a pardon or commutation for Dassey from Gov Tony Evers on Oct 2, 2019 in Madison, said, "I have never had a case that has troubled me more than this case, that has kept me awake at night, that makes me anxious and sad. And that's because I know that Brendan Dassey is innocent."
No word came from Evers before or after Oct 2019.
Then, came Evers rejection of Dassey's bid for a pardon in Dec 2019, the news hidden in a press release just before Christmas, though Evers did manage to land a shot at Dassey, knowing he would get the news while retaining expectations about the holidays.
Ken Kratz and his ilk in the Manitowoc and Calumet County sheriff offices, have a friend they may not have counted on: Wisconsin's new Attorney General Josh Kaul (D).
Josh Kaul's office through co-counsels Mark Williams, Thomas Fallon and others is carrying on the crusade against Avery and Dassey with the same lack of ethics and regard for law that defined the tenure of Kaul's three predecessors in the Wisconsin Dept of Justice.
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In the medical profession, practitioners are expected to carry out the spirit of an oath that demands doctors be healers, not destroyers.
Among police and prosecutors, there are no such strictures governing police conduct demanding no innocent be harmed or harassed, assaulted, defamed, arrested and imprisoned. In the Dassey and Avery cases, Wisconsin law enforcement destroyed evidence, then defended destroying evidence.
Among police, and its civilian collaborators, mission-critical imperatives are to protect police. The public is a free-fire zone and in warped police culture, the police cult perpetrates predictable brutality.
The type of individual, double-high authoritarian and anti-intellectual, who wants and self-selects to be a cop is capable of anything.
And all of law enforcement and politicians remain complicit in their silence.
Evers could help correct a grotesque injustice with a stroke of a pen today.
We are live in Manitowoc on the corner of Washington & 25th street, which poignantly is the same road as the courthouse where Brendan's life was snatched from him. Webcam footage doesn't do it "justice" - more photos to come #BringBrendanHome #FreeBrendanDassey pic.twitter.com/KMTyJx8Znq
— Tracy Keogh (@TracyKeogh2) December 7, 2020
WRONGFULLY CONVICTED FREE BRENDAN
ReplyDeleteDO THE RIGHT THING GOVERNOR EVERS!!
ReplyDeleteFREE BRENDAN DASSEY
#FreeBrendanDassey #BrendanIsInnocent #BringBrendanHome
ReplyDeleteThis was a huge miscarriage of justice. Brendan & Steven are innocent & were framed. They were an easy target for a corrupt county who didn't want to pay for their first mistake, another wrongful conviction of an innocent Steven Avery the first time. Do the right thing Gov Evers, you have the power to right this wrong. This breaks my heart every day to see them rotting away in prison for a crime they did not commit. Please release them Gov Evers.
Brendan es inocente π₯Ί
ReplyDelete