Murder of Lisa Ann French
Lisa Ann French | |
---|---|
Born | Oshkosh, Wisconsin U.S. | June 2, 1964
Died | October 31, 1973 Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, U.S. | (aged 9)
Cause of death | Asphyxiation and/or Shock |
Body discovered | Taycheedah, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Burial place | Estabrooks Cemetery |
Education | Chegwin Elementary School |
Lisa Ann French (June 2, 1964 – October 31, 1973) was a 9-year-old girl from Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, who was brutally murdered and sexually assaulted by her neighbor, Gerald Miles Turner Jr. (later nicknamed "The Halloween Killer"[1]), on Halloween night 1973, while she was Trick-or-Treating alone.
French was out Trick-or-Treating alone nearby her home on her way to a neighborhood Halloween party.[2] She arrived at Turner's home where Turner had lured her into his home before sexually assaulting and killing her, concealing her corpse in a garbage bag and discarding her body in a farm field in the town of Taycheedah, Wisconsin.[3] Turner had confessed to the murder nine months after and was originally sentenced to 38 years and 6 months for his crimes but was mandatorily released on parole in 1992 and 1998, but sent back to prison in 2003 for 15 years and 6 months for violating his parole.[2] The murder sent shockwaves in the local community of Fond du Lac and the state of Wisconsin in whole, directly causing more stringent daylight trick-or-treating hours in Wisconsin communities and primarily inspiring the creation of Wisconsin Chapter 980 nicknamed "Turner's Law", which enacted in 1994, allowing criminals who have been released from their prison sentences to be detained in mental institutes if they are deemed a sexual violent person and dangerous to the public.[4][5][6][7]
Background[]
Lisa Ann French was born on June 2, 1964, in Oshkosh, Wisconsin to parents Allan French and Maryann Gehrig.[8] French attended Chegwin Elementary School and was a 4th grade student there. French was also an member of the Girl Scouts before her death.[8] French lived at 192 Amory Street in a neighborhood of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, with her mother, stepfather Bruce De Pauw and newborn half-brother, which was just a half of a block away from where Turner lived at 152 Rose Avenue.[2]
Turner had lived with his then girlfriend, Arlene Penn and their infant child, at the residence around the time of French's death.[2][9] French and Turner knew each other favorably before the incident, French would often spend time with Turner and Penn's infant and would have regular conversations with Turner.[2][10] Turner had also previously shared a rented side of a duplex with the family.[11] Prior to the murder, Turner had no major sex offenses against him.[12] Turner had previously sexually molested a 15-year-old babysitter but was never accused before the murder of French.[11][13]
Night of the murder[]
French had left her home at around 5:45 p.m. dressed as a hobo wearing a black felt hat, a green parka with blue masking tape on her jeans and dotted freckles on her cheeks.[9] French originally intended to be accompanied by another friend, Ann Parker, on her way to an outdoor halloween party at Pumpkin Place on East Bank Street, but Parker had gotten in trouble with her parents and had been grounded so she had to stay at home, leaving French to trick-or-treat by herself.[14][15] It was reported that French had made previous stops at a classmate's house and the house of Karen Bauknect, a teacher of hers for candy before she made her way to Turner's residence with the hopes of receiving more candy.[2][9] When she arrived at Turner's home, she rang his doorbell and said "trick-or-treat" as she walked into his open doorway, with her candy bag opened as Turner came to the door.[16] According to Turner's confession, Turner and French had begun to talk about candy and at some point during their encounter, Turner had lured her into his bedroom where he would proceed to violently sexually assault and murder French.[17] At some point after the sexual assault, Turner said that he attempted to revive the 9-year-old girl after she stopped breathing until his girlfriend, Arlene Penn, had arrived at the home.[2] According to Penn, she arrived at the home at around 7 p.m., after attending the same halloween party with their child that French was supposed to attend that night as well. When she found Turner, he was wearing a bathrobe and claimed multiple times that he was "sick".[9] Penn also said that Turner had made several trips to the bedroom to lie down where in the bathroom adjacent to the bedroom, French's body had been placed according to Turner's confession.[2]
After Penn left the residence at around 8:00 p.m. to go visit her mother, Turner had stuffed French's body and clothes into separate bags and drove her body to Taycheedah, Wisconsin, where he discarded her corpse on McCabe Road in a farm field.[14] Turner had worn socks on his hands when moving French, in an effort to avoid having the evidence of fingerprints on Lisa's body or on the crime scene.[14] He had also gone on to wipe down French's shoes and the zipper of her parka jacket after she was killed.[16] French's mother, Maryann Gehrig, had started to grow worried about French's whereabouts when she did not returned home at her mother's instructed 7 p.m. curfew and by 10:00 p.m. later that night, a search party had arisen and begun looking for the young girl.[14]
Discovery, investigation and first trial[]
After a four-day county wide extensive search for the missing girl which included over 5,000 volunteers, 700 block parents, auxiliary police officers, The United States National Guard and some of her fellow Girl Scouts, a farmer named Gerald Braun was returning home in his tractor in Taycheedah on November 3, 1973, at 11:30 a.m., when he discovered two brown plastic bags behind a barbed wire fence near a forest on McCabe road, one containing French's naked corpse, the other containing the clothing from her halloween costume.[11][18][15] An autopsy performed on French's body had revealed that French had died from asphyxiation though a pathologist had also stated she had died from circulatory shock from the sexual trauma that she endured.[19][20] French's funeral was held on November 6, 1973, at Immanuel-Trinity Lutheran Church in Fond du Lac.[8] On November 8, 1973, The chamber of commerce had posted a ten thousand reward for the capture of Lisa Ann French's killer.[18]
Turner was made a suspect of the murder early into the investigation by Fond du Lac law enforcement, but it took nine months of questioning and testing until Turner had confessed nine months later on August 8, 1974, to the rape and murder of French to which he would later deny.[21][22] During the nine months of scrutiny from police, he was brought in by law enforcement to perform a polygraph exam which the results of the exam came back inconclusive and Turner denied to perform a second exam.[23][24] Police had also collected body hair and bedspread fiber samples from Turner, which Turner's hair samples were positively matched on French's body and her clothing.[25] Turner in his 1974 confession had stated that when he saw French in his doorway he was "highly sexually motivated", to which he said he then proceeded to lead her into his bedroom where he undressed French and then performed anal intercourse on her.[17][26] Turner then said that he noticed that French had stopped breathing after the sexual assault and he put his head over her chest and noticed that her heart was still beating and attempted to revive her by placing his hands over her chest and then listening to her chest again until he said Penn had drove up to the house.[17] Gerald Turner was subsequently taken into police custody on August 9, 1974, and was convicted on February 4, 1975, by a jury on the charges of second degree murder, enticing a child for immoral purposes and acts of sexual perversion and was sentenced to 38 years and 6 months in prison.[2][27][28]
Turner's parole releases[]
Gerald Turner was first paroled on October 13, 1992, for "good behavior" after only serving 17 years and 8 months of his sentence in Waupun Correctional Institution.[29][30] Turner's 1992 parole sparked multiple community protests and public outrage among French's relatives and residents of Milwaukee, which was where he was living at in a halfway house during his first parole.[31][32][33] This prompted lawmakers to create the sexual predator law Wisconsin Chapter 980 nicknamed "Turner's law", which was ratified on May 26, 1994, by Wisconsin governor, Tommy Thompson.[34] This law allows criminals who have been paroled or released from their prison sentences to be detained in mental institutions if they are deemed to have a "substantial probability" of committing another crime.[29] Turner was sent back to prison on November 23, 1993, after a Department of Corrections' appeal ruled that they had miscalculated his mandatory parole release from his good behavior.[27]
On January 29, 1998, after a four-day trial, a jury on Turner's parole hearing ruled that Turner was not a violent sexual predator, meaning that he could not be held at a treatment center under "Turner's law" and could begin his mandatory second parole that year.[35][36][37] In July 1998, a Judge ruled against a unsuccessful attempt to revoke his parole after a June incident in which Turner had shouted and waved a butcher knife at his caseworker while at his halfway home, although a psychiatrist ruled him to still be a dangerous individual.[38] Turner had filed a complaint on the Waste Management of Madison for the company refusing hiring him due to his criminal record.[39] Turner and the company reached a undisclosed settlement where they were required to hire Turner due to a former Wisconsin law not allowing companies to consider criminal convictions when hiring former felons unless the crime is "substantially related" to the applying job which the Waste Management company argued that he could not be hired since they had 15 tours with children during the previous school year and that he would have access to dangerous materials and chemicals.[40][41] Following Turner's complaint against the waste company, the Wisconsin State Assembly passed a bill on October 28, 1999, in a vote of 63–33, which repealed the original law that prohibited job discrimination based on a felon's criminal record, meaning that employers could then rightfully refuse to hire convicted felons on the basis of their criminal record without further complaints.[42] Turner was returned to prison for 15 additional years after violating his parole in 2003, when an abundance of pornographic content was discovered in his possession.[22][43]
Turner in an undated letter he wrote to Lisa Ann French posthumously, had appeared to show remorse for his acts while depicting the events that took place during their encounter: "I doubt that I could ever fully realize the terror you experienced at my hands, I can still see you standing the doorway with that felt hat beaming at having recognized me. Then I see the delight in your eyes turn to fear as I close the door behind you." "The rest of my life I will have to live with what I did to you." "On that night I became a monster. ... I do swear to you on the forfeiture of my life I will never harm another child."[44][45] Turner had at one time suggested that due to him committing the crimes on Halloween, he had receive more significance for the crime and his case once quoting, "If it had happened on some other day, like Valentine’s Day, nobody would have gave a damn."[46][45]
Turner's prison release and detainment[]
After being returned to prison to serve 15 and a half years for violating his parole in 2003, Gerald Turner was scheduled to be mandatorily released fully from his extended prison sentence at Racine Correctional Institution without any parole restrictions on February 1, 2018.[47] Turner's impending release caused Lisa Ann French's mother to create an online petition in an effort to keep Turner incarcerated in a mental treatment facility.[48] As of 2021, The petition has corralled over 34 thousand signatures with over 9 thousand signatures from Wisconsin residents. The Wisconsin Department of Justice had then filed a legal petition on January 26, 2018, prior to his mandatory prison release on to make the case to keep Turner detained under Wisconsin Chapter 980.[49] Turner was then transported to a facility in Juneau County temporarily, while awaiting a scheduled hearing on April 6, 2018, to determine if Turner was a violent sex offender and can be held at a treatment facility permanently.[50]
The scheduled April 6 hearing had been postponed, following circuit court judge, Robert Wirtz, attempting to transfer the proceedings of the case originally from Fond du Lac County to Dane County, Wisconsin.[51][52] This move was a result of Turner's defense attorney persuading Wirtz to move the hearing arguing that Turner had lived in a Madison halfway home during his second parole before he was sent back to prison.[20] Wisconsin's Department of Justice then proceeded to appeal the circuit judge's decision to move the case to Dane County as the Department of Justice argued that the hearing should take place where the crime occurred.[53] As the intervals between each hearing lengthened, a spokesperson for the Department of Justice had stated that there was no timeline for when a final decision on Turner's status was to be made as Turner has currently remained at Sand Ridge Secure Treatment Center in Mauston, Wisconsin.[54] In 2019, a Wisconsin appellate court irrevocably ruled that Turner was to be tried again in Fond du Lac County, overriding the circuit court judge's decision and ruling he had to be tried in Fond du Lac County at some point except the proceedings were postponed again partly because of the COVID-19 pandemic.[55][56] It was most recently reported that Turner was set to have his status tried again in court on October 29, 2020, two days before the 47th anniversary of the murder of French.[56]
See also[]
References[]
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- ^ "Photos: Four decades later, effects of Lisa Ann French's murder remain". www.fdlreporter.com. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
- ^ "How the 1973 murder of a 9-year-old girl changed trick-or-treat in Wisconsin". WISN. October 25, 2019. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ "Trick-or-treating hours changed after 1973 crime". TMJ4. October 31, 2018. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ Martens, Bill (February 8, 2018). "Amid Turner Case, Analyzing Wisconsin's Sexually Violent Persons Law". Wisconsin Public Radio. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
- ^ "WI Predator-Law Poster Boy Gets Released | Prison Legal News". Prison Legal News. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ a b c "Obituary for Lisa Anne French (Aged 9)". The Reporter. November 5, 1973. p. 33. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
- ^ a b c d Balousek, Marv (1997). 50 Wisconsin Crimes of the Century. Badger Books Inc. p. 253. ISBN 978-1-878569-47-9.
- ^ "Family of girl killed in 1973 tries to stop killer's release". La Crosse Tribune. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
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- ^ a b c d Moore, Sharon Roznik and Mary Helen. "Stuart mom fights release of 'Halloween killer,' who murdered her 9-year-old child in 1973". Treasure Coast. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
- ^ a b Lewandowski, Emma. "True Crime: The Fond du Lac Halloween Killer". Sabre Voice. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
- ^ a b Hruz, Thomas (2000). "Gerald Turner" (PDF). wisciviljusticecouncil.org. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ a b c "The Reporter from Fond du Lac, Wisconsin on January 31, 1975 · 3". Newspapers.com. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
- ^ a b Balousek, Marv (1997). 50 Wisconsin Crimes of the Century. Badger Books Inc. p. 254. ISBN 978-1-878569-47-9.
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- ^ "Fond Du Lac Reporter Newspaper Archives, Feb 4, 1975, p. 1". NewspaperArchive.com. February 4, 1975. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
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- ^ Roznik, Sharon. "Attorney General: Keep 'Halloween Killer' Gerald Turner locked up in Wisconsin". The Reporter. Retrieved April 28, 2021.
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- 1970s missing person cases
- 1973 murders in the United States
- 1973 in Wisconsin
- Deaths by person in the United States
- Murdered American children
- October 1973 events in the United States
- Female murder victims
- Sexual assaults in the United States
- Missing person cases in Wisconsin
- Murder in Wisconsin
- History of Wisconsin
- Halloween events
- Incidents of violence against girls
- Fond du Lac, Wisconsin