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Roelke to spend 3 years in prison for child sex crimes

In a charged hearing, Russell Roelke, a 45-year-old former West Bend youth ministry director originally charged with four counts of child sex crimes, was sentenced Monday to a 14-year prison term by Washington County Circuit Judge Annette Ziegler.

Under sentencing guidelines, Roelke will serve three years in the state prison system and the remainder under extended supervision.

After the sentence was passed, with audible moans emanating from the large contingent of his supporters, Roelke’s mother collapsed inside the courtroom and was attended to by West Bend paramedics. She was able to walk out of the courtroom later with assistance.

Roelke had earlier entered guilty pleas to two counts, one of use of a computer to facilitate a sex crime and one of possession of child pornography. A former youth ministry director at Fifth Avenue Methodist Church in West Bend, Roelke had also been charged with child enticement and exposing a child to harmful material, but Washington County Assistant District Attorney Holly Bunch had agreed to dismiss those charges as part of a plea agreement.

Roelke was supposed to be sentenced in February, but his attorney, Gerald Boyle, said a computer disk containing alleged pornographic images downloaded from Roelke’s computer had just been made available to him. He said he needed to examine the disk to see how it may impact the sentencing. Bunch said she too had just received the evidence and did not object to the delay.

According to the criminal complaint, Roelke made contact with a Keene, N.H. detective assigned to the Child Sexual Abuse and Exploitation Task Force who posed online as a 14-year-old boy.

Numerous online chats followed, the complaint stated, and "became very sexually graphic in nature." Roelke also "sent a link" to the detective that contained more than 400 images of child pornography.

Armed with this information, the West Bend Police Department obtained a search warrant and seized Roelke’s home computer, computer storage files and related items.

Following the search, Roelke told West Bend Police Det. Tim Dehring that he had become involved in "fantasy role playing" concerning sexual relationships between teenage boys and adult men.

Roelke had been a Scout leader from 1999-2003, according to court records, and, at the time of his arrest, was a Big Brother to an area boy whose age was not disclosed.

Prior to Monday’s sentencing, four people - including Roelke’s father and a lay pastor at his present church - urged Ziegler to show compassion. Roelke’s sister, a lieutenant in the Oshkosh Police Department, submitted a taped message that Boyle played. The sister is out of state on a work-related assignment.

"He is a kind and gentle person," she said on tape. "Even when we were kids, when I egged him on, he never did anything," she said.

She asked Ziegler to show compassion and sentence him to probation.

During closing arguments, Bunch debunked Roelke’s claim that he was engaged in fantasy role playing to help him understand his own molestation he claimed happened when he was younger.

"This was done for his sexual satisfaction, not as part of an extended fantasy," she said.

Bunch - along with a presentence report writer - both recommended three-year prison terms and a period of extended supervision.

Boyle said Roelke, who has no prior criminal record, was just an example of the wrong direction society is taking on the moral compass.

"We have a breakdown in society," he said, noting that it was impossible to go to a movie today and not get flooded with sexual messages.

The Internet, he said, is the prime culprit for the breakdown, he said, affording people easy access to previously unimaginable images and information.

"It’s that severe sickness in society," he said.

He also said there was no victim in the offenses with which Roelke was charged.

Ziegler, who said she was originally leaning toward a stiffer sentence, said while there was no sexual molestation, that was not the crime Roelke confessed to.

"These are charges of using a computer to facilitate a child sex crime and possession of child pornography," she said.

"It’s not their (his family and supporters in court) fault you’re sitting in that chair," she said.

Roelke could have faced a maximum prison sentence of 28 years and more than $100,000 in fines.

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Anonymous Anonymous said...
I guess I don't understand the point of this post, other than to point out the need for everyone to be careful of who they allow to be in contact with their kids.

Oh, wait! I see. He claimed to be a Christian. Now I get it. Yawn. The hypocrite angle has been overdone already. We already know that some self-proclaimed Christians are really only living for themselves.


Anonymous Michelle said...
Thanks for posting this story. It is just more proof that christians are no more moral than non-christians.

Even when I became an ex-christian, I still had respect for christians because I believed that they had higher morals than the average person. Now I don't see them as any better or different, just more repressed.

It's bad enough when a non-religious person molests a child, but when a "christian" does it, it's twice as sickening. One day they're admonishing their congregation about achieving a christ-like manner, and the next they're trying to hook up with a child for sex. WTF goes on in these people's brains!


Anonymous Interested Atheist said...
Anonymous said:
"Oh, wait! I see. He claimed to be a Christian. Now I get it. Yawn. The hypocrite angle has been overdone already. We already know that some self-proclaimed Christians are really only living for themselves. "

I can see a number of good reasons to highlight this incident:

1. He didn't "claim" to be a Christian. He was one. I don't buy the idea that there are "some true and some false" Christians. This is an untestable concept. Has he, following his arrest and exposure, admitted that the whole Christian thing was a facade intended to con people? No? Then he was a Christian.

2. Christians should - are called to be - morally superior. If cases like these aren't pointed out - or if they are covered up - it may help to fool people into thinking that Christians really are generally morally superior.

3. The outcome of this may be that people are less willing to trust Christians in general. Since I see Christians as, on the whole, unwitting con men selling a big lie, this can only be a good thing.


Blogger .:webmaster:. said...
It's not that he is a Christian.

It is that he is a Christian leader -- a minister -- a youth pastor.

Yes, definitely be careful of who you allow to be in contact with your kids...

The angle has been overdone already? Unfortunately I think you're right. It's sickening that there are new stories of Christian leaders being caught in heinous crimes every single week. When these Christian leaders stop victimizing people's kids, then these stories won't appear here anymore.


Blogger Bentley said...
The most common mistake that a Christian makes is, when a person professes Jesus as their personal savior, unbenounced to them is that Satan, has this big control knob and now he starts increasing the volume up on sin and directs sinful thoughts to the Christian, as never before, this is the trials and tribulations that a Christian must face on a daily basis, they were never forwarned by their pastor that Satan would become more prevalient in their lives by temptation to evil now after claiming Jesus as their own, more so, than ever before. Now they must pray daily, to lead them not into temptation.

As it plainly states in the Bible, it is more probable that a Christian will most likely commit more sins and crimes, than an Atheist and will face eternal judgement from God.

Of course Atheists do not share in this problem of having being tempted of evil or Satan, or a Gods judgement, simply because we do not believe in Satan and God, therefore Christians are more apt and prone to commit more sins than Atheists. This proves that Christians are more sin filled than Atheists.


Anonymous Anonymous said...
Did anyone catch the defense attorney's argument in this case?:

"Roelke was a victim of our sick society where it is impossible to go to the movies or log onto the internet without being bombarded with sexual messages. It is this sexualized thought world that absorbed Roelke and made him do what he did -- send child porn to a minor and solicit sex from him."

Where is the personal reponsibility in a defense like this? People are responsible for what they do and cannot blame it on God, Satan, "the media" or anything else. If we live in a sex-obsessed society, it is likely the mania from Christianity that made our society this way.


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