My Hope Chest…
Letters I’ve received over the past two years from five innocent men in Wisconsin Prisons…
My hope is that Keith Kutska, Michael Hirn, Reynold Moore, Dale Basten, and Michael Johnson come home to their families very soon.
My Hope Chest…
Letters I’ve received over the past two years from five innocent men in Wisconsin Prisons…
My hope is that Keith Kutska, Michael Hirn, Reynold Moore, Dale Basten, and Michael Johnson come home to their families very soon.
Early in my advocacy concerning the injustice of six Wisconsin men, I learned about Reynold Moore; one of the six, from my sister, Clare. She knew Rey and his wife long before the incident happened at the mill in 1992. They had been good friends. That bond resulted in her firm belief of his innocence and of the innocence of the other five men. Clare was also the catalyst for my involvement into this mission to free all of the men.
There’s a memory Clare uses to describe Rey’s character. She often talks about the days before Rey was convicted and how he and his wife would invite Clare over to their house to visit. Since her only source of transportation back then was riding her bicycle, she would head over to their house on the bike, knowing Rey would offer to throw it into the back of his pickup and drive her home if it got too late or too dark. She will never forget how concerned Rey was for her safety.
That view of Rey shines brightly through in all of his correspondence. There’s no accurate way to define him other than as someone who beams with inherent kindness. Rey always ends his letters with a prayerful blessing for me and my family. He appreciates the hope now instilled within because of our support.
Rey will be the first to say that his record is not spotless and that he was not always a nice person. Maybe so, but this is not the picture my sister paints of him. She has shared the struggles he’s had and how they’ve affected his family. I can only imagine the burden he faces daily. Still, he exhibits patience and forgiveness. I’m aware of many close friends and supporters of his who vigorously advocate on his behalf and participate in activities to promote his release.
The crucial evidence used to convict Rey was the testimony of a paid jailhouse informant, James Gilliam. On the day of the arrests in the Monfils case, James Gilliam, a career criminal, was also arrested for threatening a woman with a butcher knife.* He immediately saw an opportunity. He told the authorities that while he was jail, he shared a cell with Rey. He claimed Rey had confided in him about the murder. And on the witness stand during the Monfils trial, Gilliam testified that Rey disclosed details to him about how he (Rey) had participated in the beating of Tom Monfils. Even though Gilliam’s statements contradicted the known facts, he was rewarded with two years’ probation and was set free for his contribution to the prosecution’s case.
But years later, Gilliam recanted his original statement while being interviewed by the Wisconsin Innocence Project (WIP). In light of this recantation, the WIP had taken up Rey’s case. They petitioned the court to grant Rey a hearing based on this latest development. Their aim was to ask that Rey be given a new trial which might produce a different outcome than the original trial. But when Gilliam took the stand during the hearing, he recanted his recantation. He reversed his story to reflect what he had said at the original trial. Ultimately, the petition for a new trial for Rey was denied.
Despite these disappointments, Reynold Moore has held strong to himself and to his faith. He tells me he looks forward to the day when we meet “face to face” so that he can thank me in person for all I’ve done for him. I look forward to that day as well. But I, in turn, wish to thank him for being the caring friend he was and is, to my sister.
*Gilliam is currently serving a life sentence for murdering his wife. He is ineligible for parole.
Sometime during the morning of Friday, March 28, 2014, Brian Kellner, one of the prosecution’s star witnesses in the Tom Monfils 1995 murder case, died from a blood clot, (possibly) induced from treatments he was undergoing for cancer.
I found the following listing in the Green Bay Press-Gazette the next day on Saturday, March 29, 2014. Even though it was a last minute addition to the paper with little time to elaborate on the life of this person, it still saddened me to note the lack of substance it contained, despite Mr. Kellner’s vastly publicized and historically critical role in what continues to be one of the most publicized court cases in all of Wisconsin. I couldn’t help but feel extreme loneliness and isolation for this man.
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Obituary
Kellner, Brian A.
Brian A. Kellner, 57, Denmark, died Friday, March 28, 2014. Funeral arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Blaney Funeral Home.
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On the exact same day that this announcement appeared, there was a related interview published in the online version of the Green Bay Press-Gazette given by Randy Winkler; the lead detective in the Monfils case. Winkler, who successfully achieved the convictions of six (innocent) men, proceeds to chastise Mr. Kellner by stating rather proudly how he “bluffed” Kellner into giving a (false) statement.
Note: After realizing the implications of his mistake in giving false testimony during the trial concerning an alleged bubbler confrontation (which supposedly took place at the mill the morning of the disappearance of Tom Monfils), Brian Kellner tried in vain to recant his testimony. Up until the day he died, Mr. Kellner stood by that recantation and the reasoning behind its initiation.
On the following day, Sunday, March 30, 2014, an article that disclosed a more in-depth account of Winkler’s interview was also printed in the hard copy version of the paper along with this link to that interview.
To me this begs for a serious discussion about the possible intent to disparage Kellner via the timing of these two articles. Was it coincidental? Indifference on the behalf of Winkler? Not out of the question as far as this advocate is concerned…