MAX SENTENCE HANDED DOWN FOR THREATS BY PRISONER

MAX SENTENCE HANDED DOWN FOR THREATS BY PRISONER

Attorney General Josh Kaul announced that on August 14, 2019, Jerry Wayne True was sentenced by Bayfield County Circuit Judge John P. Anderson to the maximum sentence allowed by law for threats to injure a judge, threats to injure a judge’s family, and one count each of threats to injure a prosecutor, with each count charged as a habitual offender. A jury convicted True in July 2019.

“Threats like the ones made in this case are an attack on our system of justice,” said Attorney General Kaul. “This case sends a clear message that people who threaten the safety of others face severe consequences.”

Judge Anderson sentenced True to the maximum sentence allowed by law – 40 years, 28 years of initial confinement, followed by 12 years of extended supervision, consecutive to any and all sentences he is presently serving.

In November 2017, Jerry Wayne True sat in the Sawyer County Jail and penned a letter to a friend in which he outlined his plans for when he was released from prison:  he would research changing his name, changing his date of birth, and then killing the family of the Sawyer County circuit court judge, then the Sawyer County circuit court judge, then the Sawyer County District Attorney and the Sawyer County Assistant District Attorney, then his probation officer and finally his probation officer’s supervisor. 

He wrote that they had ruined his life so he was going to hunt them down and take theirs. He wrote that he would blow up the courthouse, and the Department of Corrections office.  Sawyer County Sheriff’s Office Jail personnel intercepted the letter.

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