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Longtime Delavan alderman will not seek re-electio...

What a whopper!

Scammer threatens Lake Geneva woman

Stories that grabbed the headlines in 2008

How Elkhorn became Christmas card town

It's a mess out there today

Robbery suspect charged

Warhawks fall in championship

Darien chief remains on leave

Blagojevich's getaway

Oct. 2008 stories

Sept. 2008 stories

Aug. 2008 stories

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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Longtime Delavan alderman will not seek re-election

Five-term Delavan Alderman Ryan Schroeder will not seek re-election this spring, citing increased job demands and the desire to spend more time with his family.

Schroeder has represented Delavan's Third District since 1999. He served two terms as council president, and has made unsuccessful bids for Delavan mayor and the state Assembly.

He said his decision opens the door for a new alderman with new ideas to step forward.

"I am hopeful whoever takes my seat on the council will bring with then new ideas, energy and a commitment to service that Delavan deserves, as I have done to the best of my abilities over the years," Schroeder said in a statement.

Schroeder works in Madison as a legislative aide to state Rep. Josh Zepnick, D-Milwaukee.


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What a whopper!

The Burlington Liars Club announced Monday that a 71-year-old Oconto Falls, Wis., man submitted the top lie of 2008.

From the AP:


MILWAUKEE -- A whopper about a devious baby and his diapers is the top lie of 2008, an organization of champion fibbers declared Monday. The Burlington Liars Club bestowed its top award for this line: "My grandson is the most persuasive liar I have ever met. By the time he was 2 years old he could dirty his diaper and make his mother believe someone else had done it."

Garth Seehawer, 71, of Oconto Falls, said he took immense pride in having crafted the 2008 Champion Lie.

"When you're the best in the world at something, sure, that's an honor," he said, insisting with a chuckle that his background as a lawyer gave him no advantage.

Four judges picked Seehawer's lie out of about 160 entries.

The six runners-up included a fib about air passengers watching the movie "Cocoon" when turbulence hits, spilling water from the screen and causing the airliner's life rafts to inflate.

The Burlington Liars Club got its start in 1929 when local journalists Otis Hulett and Mannel Hahn fabricated a news story about a lying contest between the Burlington police and fire departments. The police chief won after he said he'd never be good at lying because he never told a lie.

From those beginnings, the club expanded to about 2,000 members around the world, said Eddie Impens, the club's vice president. It's headquartered in Burlington, a town about 35 miles southwest of Milwaukee.

Impens, who owns a lumber company, said most of this year's entries came from Wisconsin, though one arrived from Canada. He expected more entries from France, which historically has produced the best lies entered from overseas, he said.

A telephone conversation with Impens is fraught with lighthearted skepticism. He answers questions easily, but occasionally adds with a quick laugh, "You know, I could be lying to you about all this."

A lifetime membership in the Liars Club costs $1. It grants the holder the right to submit an unlimited number of fibs each year.

Concocting a good lie isn't a matter of diligence, Seehawer said. Usually, the spark of an idea pops into his head, and he lets it percolate for a while before typing it out and submitting it.

He came close to capturing the club's top honor about 12 years ago with the observation that a winter breeze was so stiff it blew off his brother's bald spot, leaving him with a full head of hair.

"A good lie isn't just a tall tale or exaggerating," he said. "You have to have something fun, not believable but impossibly true."



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Monday, January 05, 2009

Scammer threatens Lake Geneva woman

LAKE GENEVA -- A scam that police say originated in Nigeria took a threatening turn for a Lake Geneva woman.

A call to the woman's cell phone claimed someone had paid to have the woman killed. The caller then told her that for $6,000 he would reveal who had hired him.

A later e-mail instructed the woman to send $6,000 to an address in London.

Police traced the cell phone call to Turkey or Nigeria and the e-mail to Nigeria, according to a police department news release.

Lake Geneva police now believe the call and e-mail are the latest in a series of scams originating in Nigeria.

People who receive similar phone calls or e-mails should immediately contact authorities, police said.

Story HERE.


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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Stories that grabbed the headlines in 2008


Courts, government and the sagging economy grabbed headlines in Walworth County last year.

Several high-profile court cases drew national attention, while the long-awaited restructuring of the Walworth County Board was completed in the spring election.

The year had its share of good stories, as well, highlighted by two local high school teams that made trips to state.

To get a sense of how these stories played out in the news, we enlisted co-workers from our Delavan CSI Media office to rank the biggest of the year.

There were many opinions about which stories were the most important, but there's no doubt that these are the stories that people were talking about in 2008.

10) March 6 -- Badger goes to state: Long-range shooting propelled the Badger High School boys' basketball team to the WIAA Division 1 tournament, where they eventually lost to Madison Memorial 79-63.

9) Nov. 20 -- Big Foot goes to state: After an undefeated season, the Big Foot football team made it to their first WIAA Division 4 state championship game, but came up short, losing to Wautoma/Faith Christian, 20-0.

8) April 28 -- Voters reject Lake Geneva development: After a heated campaign that divided the city, residents defeated an advisory referendum regarding the Mirbeau-Hummel residential development on the south side of Lake Geneva. Legal action continues over the future of the property.

7) Nov. 5 -- Teen driver pleads guilty: The case of a Genoa City teen accused in the 2007 drunken-driving death of a father of four continued throughout 2008. While out on bond, Krystal Hart twice was arrested at parties, violating conditions ordered by the judge. Hart pleaded guilty Nov. 5, and faces a maximum of 31 years and nine months in prison when she is sentenced Jan. 30.

6) Sept. 2 -- Lakeland School opens: After years of hand-wringing, legal challenges and decision-making, the new Lakeland School of Walworth County opened near the Walworth County Complex on County Highway NN in Elkhorn. The old building has since been sold to a developer.

5) April 1 -- Downsizing done: Voters elect a smaller, 11-member Walworth County Board in the spring election. Two members are new to the board, while nine were incumbents from the previous 25-member board. In 2007, voters chose to reduce the number of supervisors on the board.

4) June 30 --Toddler rescued: A Kenosha man was shot and killed by sheriff's deputies after he pointed a gun at his 1-year-old daughter following a chase. Police say Antonio J. Torres beat his 1-year-old daughter's mother in Kenosha and kidnapped the girl. He led authorities on a chase, eventually stopping on County Highway H near Pell Lake. While sitting in the driver's seat, police say Torres grabbed his daughter, placed her on the centerline of the road and pointed his shotgun at her. Two deputies shot and killed him.

3) June 5 -- Economy hits home: Layoffs and closures at companies throughout Walworth County accelerated as the economy worsened. In August, Bliss Communications ceased publication of The Week, following the purchase of the CSI newspaper group. Walworth County Sunday now includes The Week's favorite features, but the slowing economy forced layoffs of former Week employees. Also over the summer, Conn-Selmer closed the Holton Band Instrument facility in Elkhorn. Then, Automated Building Components closed their truss plant in Sharon, USG closed its Delavan plant, and Plymouth Tube in East Troy announced it will lay off 31 workers by the end of this month.

2) Sept. 2 -- Husband charged: David A. Brossard, 40, of Burlington, was arrested on charges of 1st degree intentional homicide in the killing of his wife, Dawn Brossard. Dawn Brossard was reported missing in October 1997. David Brossard was the last person known to have seen her. Recreational divers located her body in Lake Geneva on July 11, 2003. David Brossard has pleaded not guilty, and is expected back in court Feb. 5 for a status hearing.

1) Feb. 27 -- Husband convicted: In a case that gained national attention, Mark Jensen was sentenced to life in prison without parole for poisoning and suffocating his wife, Julie, in 1998 in Kenosha County.

The high-profile nature of the case forced a change of venue, which moved to Walworth County Circuit Court.

The proceedings eventually were made into an episode of the CBS program, "48 Hours Mysteries."


Dan Plutchak is an associate editor at Walworth County Sunday. Reach him at dplutchak@communityshoppers.com.






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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

How Elkhorn became Christmas card town



Elkhorn's "March of Time" episode in 1952: HERE

The history of Elkhorn's Christmas card paintings: HERE

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It's a mess out there today

Listening to scanner traffic in the CSI newsroom, it sounds like there are numerous runoffs, spinouts and minor accidents all across the county, including Highway 12, Interstate 43 and various county trunk roads.

Also, if anyone is planning to travel to Rock County to get on I-39/90, you may want to rethink that plan. Rock County authorities have suspended towing activities on the interstate, and have asked motorists to avoid the area until the weather clears up.

Here's a link to Wisconsin's new 511 traveler information site, as well as one to WisDOT's road-conditions map.







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Monday, December 22, 2008

Robbery suspect charged

GENEVA TOWNSHIP -- An Illinois man suspected in an attempted holdup at a Geneva Township gas station Dec. 9 has been charged with two counts of armed robbery.

Police allege Jonathan G. Massie, 20, of Hinsdale, Ill., and Clayton C. Bone, 19, of La Grange Park, Ill., entered the Handi-Mart on County Highway H wearing ski masks and armed with shotguns.

The two men fled, and during the pursuit, Bone shot himself with a 12-gauge shotgun. He died at the scene, authorities said.

Massie appeared in Walworth County Court Dec. 11; bond was set at $100,000 cash.

Story HERE

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