Monday, November 17, 2008

Tammy Lewis Convicted of Misdemeanor

UPDATE, July 22, 2009: Religious leader sentenced to two years in decaying corpse case
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What's the price of keeping a decomposing corpse in your bathroom for a couple of months?

Tammy Lewis knows.

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

A woman accused of helping her religious leader hide a decaying corpse on her toilet so they could continue collecting the dead woman's Social Security was convicted of a misdemeanor in a deal for her to testify against the leader, a prosecutor said today.

Tammy Lewis, 36, of Necedah pleaded no contest to obstructing a police officer and was fined $350 in a plea agreement that defers prosecution of more serious charges. Juneau County Circuit Judge John Roemer ordered her to pay the fine within 60 days or serve a seven-day jail sentence.

Lewis and Alan Bushey, 58, were accused of hiding 90-year-old Magdeline Alvina Middlesworth's body on a toilet in Lewis' home after she died in March. Investigators said Middlesworth and Lewis were members of a religious sect that Bushey led called the Order of the Divine Will.

Bushey told Lewis that God would revive Middlesworth, who friends and family said was from Washington state, investigators said.

Lewis in May initially told a sheriff's deputy that Middlesworth was on vacation.

The deputy later discovered the elderly woman's rotting body in Lewis' stench-filled home.

She also told authorities that she had Middlesworth's power of attorney, and the older woman used all of her money to support their six-member religious group. Investigators believe Middlesworth's Social Security and annuity checks totaling nearly $3,000 were deposited after her death into a bank account she shared with Lewis.

As part of Lewis' plea agreement, five other charges, including three felony counts of hiding a corpse and causing mental harm to a child, will be dismissed in two years if she cooperates with prosecutors and follows other court orders involving her children, Juneau County District Attorney Scott Southworth said.

"We view her as a victim as well of Alan Bushey," Southworth said. "We also understand the power, the mental power, that Alan Bushey was exercising over her, the coercion he was exerting over her."

A deferred prosecution agreement calls for Lewis to continue to receive mental health treatment and testify against Bushey in a trial set to begin in April, the prosecutor said.

She and her two children will be witnesses in the trial, he said.

If Lewis is a victim, I wonder what Southworth would call Lewis' children.

How do children get over the experience of living with a decaying corpse in their bathroom for two months?

A $350 fine?

I don't think that's appropriate. I don't think justice was served.

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