Yesterday, three more 911 calls from the Crandon shootings were released.
They were placed by Mike and Mary Kegley, informing authorities that Tyler Peterson, the shooter, was with them.
If they were released in response to stepped-up pressure and scrutiny from the media, both in Wisconsin and nationally, I don't think they do nearly enough to assuage concern about the police response. Officials need to do more than release some tapes to quell the criticism.
There are gaping holes in the official timeline of events, and authorities are offering no explanations.
From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
In direct but relatively calm tones, a husband and wife calling from rural Crandon described their unexpected Sunday morning visitor to police and sheriff's officials - his demeanor after killing six friends, his reluctance to surrender and the pistol tucked into his pants.
Nearly two hours had passed since Tyler Peterson, an off-duty sheriff's deputy and family friend, had shown up on their doorstep.
When Mike Kegley called the Forest County 911 line at 9:15 a.m., he told a sheriff's dispatcher matter-of-factly: "We got that Tyler Peterson at the house right now."
Kegley and his wife, Mary, have said they called authorities earlier, when Peterson first drove up to see them and his longtime friend, their son Matt, just before 8 a.m. They have wondered publicly what took sheriff's and police officials so long to arrive at their wooded property north of Crandon.
Those earlier calls were not included in the recordings released Tuesday by the state Department of Justice, but officials don't deny they were made.
Kevin St. John, a department spokesman, said the tapes released Tuesday represent all of the calls made from the Kegleys' property to 911. Calls made to law enforcement authorities at non-emergency numbers also were recorded, but those tapes are not being released at this time, St. John said.
That information will be released when officials determine that it will not hinder or impair the investigation into the murders Peterson committed and his final hours, St. John said.
The Kegleys' attorney, Michael Roe, verified that Mary Kegley called police shortly after Peterson first arrived at her home.
"When (Attorney General J.B.) Van Hollen says he's giving you all the 911 calls, he may be telling the truth but he's not giving you all the other calls made," Roe said. "I know for a fact that (911) was not the only number called."
...The recordings provide a glimpse into what transpired on the Kegleys' property, but leave a wide gap in an official version of events from those calls to Peterson's apparent suicide during an encounter with police around 12:30 p.m.
A timeline provided by the Department of Justice last week shows that Peterson made two calls to the Forest County sheriff, at 9:56 and 10:36 a.m. No tapes of those calls have been released to date.
...In earlier interviews, the Kegleys reported they called to alert authorities before Peterson left their property to meet with his mother and grandmother. He left at 8:30 a.m., according to the official timeline.
I hope there's a good explanation for this drip, drip, drip release of information.
The shooter Tyler Peterson is dead and six of his seven victims are dead.
In terms of the investigation, there's not all that much left to learn about the shootings. Perhaps Charlie Neitzel, the only victim to survive the rampage, has some key information.
I can't imagine that what he'd have to say would fundamentally change what's already known.
The silence of law enforcement doesn't seem to be related to the murders. It's those unaccounted for hours in the aftermath of the slaughter and the circumstances of Peterson's death that are at issue. That's what's prompting all the speculation.
I think it's weird that Van Hollen has decided to parse words about the release of the calls.
He's made all the 911 calls available, but that's not all the calls.
We don't need that sort of verbal evasion.
About Mike and Mary Kegley-- They sound remarkably calm on the phone, but their lives could have been in danger.
So why didn't police move in as soon as they heard where Peterson was?
The police sound very matter-of-fact about Peterson being at the Kegley home.
Of course, they needed to protect the Kegleys and make sure that they didn't do anything that would cause Peterson to add more people to his list of victims.
But the police response is rightfully being questioned.
There was no way that they could be certain that Peterson was finished murdering; yet hours went by before he was no longer a threat to anyone.
Van Hollen and other authorities should fill in the holes in the timeline.
Releasing inconsequential tapes of 911 calls isn't nearly enough.
The public deserves answers.
3 comments:
YOR OWN GOVERNMENT IS RESPONSIBLE...THERE ARE MILION PROOFS...BUT DON'T BE BLIND ABOUT DEMOCRATES...THEY'RE IN THE SAME CLUB AS REPUBLICANS...BUT THIS CLUBS ARE SECRET...SO IT DOESN'T MATTER IF HILLARY WINS.....CHECK MY BLOG..MAYBE SOME WILL BE INTERESTING FOR U
Honestly what is wrong with people and why can't we be left alone? Again the media are a bunch of vultures and need to move on. I don't think anyone deserves anything exect our town. It is our government and our police department and our children and our painful loss. So if you are really enjoying your twisted game of rub it in, then by all means go ahead. Let's hear those names again and maybe some more gossip about what those kids were doing and why they were doing it! When your done maybe you'll have a little more time on your hands where you could maybe send a sympathy card to one of the families or maybe donate to one of the charities or maybe just sit back and think 'maybe enough is enough and we should just let these people be' there is other news in the world! These are my neighbors, my family, my friends, and my home and I am tired of how you talk about us. If you really feel for us then go away and find something else to talk about, maybe the war and global warming or something a little more important than a small town tradgedy that people have been dwelling on for two weeks!
"anonymous," the families and friends of the victims and Tyler Peterson, as well as the community of Crandon have my sympathy.
However, it's wrong for you to suggest that others don't have a stake in how the case is being handled by the attorney general.
J.B. Van Hollen answers to Wisconsinites. He holds statewide office.
If he's acting inappropriately, it matters to us.
I have not spread ANY gossip or passed ANY judgment on "what those kids were doing and why they were doing it." To the contrary, I've dismissed all discussion on that as irrelevant.
You're lashing out at the wrong person.
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