Kenosha Police Union

hammer1

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The sins of the father became the sins of the son, in sharp contrast to what friends and colleagues say Joseph P. Balistrieri was like in his personal life.

Balistrieri died Monday. He was 70.

His father, of course, was the late Frank P. Balistrieri, long considered the Mafia boss of Milwaukee by federal authorities. Frank Balistrieri and his sons, attorneys Joseph and John, were convicted of extortion in 1984. Frank was sentenced to 13 years. His sons were sentenced to eight years and released after serving 39 months in prison.

The sons later publicly repudiated their father as an "evil force" who dragged them into his world and public ruin.

"He had made our births a scandal," Joe once said.

The convictions came after long years of investigation and sometimes charges by authorities. The 1984 conviction was the one that stuck. In addition to prison, neither practiced law again.

The legal evidence included FBI wiretap conversations between the two brothers.

"Brother John," Joe said at one point on the tape, "any hope of being legitimate is automatically erased  . . . the time to make our move was in 1975 when we were absolutely clean."

"We had to do it his way," Joe added bitterly, "(and) we were absolutely corrupted."

On the surface, the details of his life seemed normal and even exemplary. He went to Catholic grade school and Marquette University High School. He graduated from the University of Notre Dame, lettering twice in track, before earning a law degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1965.

"I remember the first time I saw Joey after he became an attorney," said William Janz, who wrote about the Balistrieri family for the old Milwaukee Sentinel and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. "He walked out of the judge's chambers and a state agent was sitting in the back of the courtroom and took pictures of him."

It was a harbinger of things to come.

He was a suave man, with a subdued sense of elegance and style. He loved the arts, especially opera, traveling overseas for concerts and even teaching classes on the subject.

By all accounts, Joe Balistrieri was also a gifted attorney.

"He was one of the brightest guys I've ever known," said attorney Gerald P. Boyle. "He was a first-rate lawyer . . .  and he was very much a gentleman. Unfortunately, he was born into a culture that, I think, caused him to do things he might not otherwise have done."

Others agreed.

"I think it was a consequence of culture, rather than greed or a need for power," said James Shellow, a criminal defense lawyer who represented Frank Balistrieri.

"If you listen to the wiretaps, Joe was the one who recognized that," Shellow said. "He was trapped  . . .  He didn't feel he could escape his destiny."

Janz recalled asking him how he was doing - "The dumbest question I ever asked him" - while Balistrieri stood alone outside during his trial.

Balistrieri answered with quiet gallows humor.

"As the man said after he jumped from the Empire State Building and passed the 76th floor, 'So far, so good,' " Balistrieri replied.

Contacted Tuesday, his brother declined to discuss any cause of his older brother's death - or any aspect of the criminal cases.

"He was a gentleman of exceptionally good character," John said. "He had a brilliant mind. He was respected and admired by his friends, not only in the legal community but the Italian community."

After prison, both returned to a life largely out of the news. Their father died in 1993. Joe Balistrieri remained an owner and operator of the Shorecrest Hotel, where he also lived.
 

hammer1

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not a hero at all but Joe as FAR as i now was a fine person was a friend


of the Jewish Lawyers that represented my famiy and me. .


we have an individual in the Whouse who hopefully serves time after the Southern
dist of New York gets thru with him. big fan of extortion Ex 1 Ukraine Extorsion to him is Loyalty .
 

RBD

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Conky!!


PS - People on Trump's level, or hillary's for that matter, do not go to jail, regardless of what they do.

PPS - The powers that run Netflix have a political agenda, especially when it comes to crime and punishment.
Their "documentaries" often omit any info that does not fit the narrative they are pushing.
Some of their films are not made to entertain or inform you,
they're made to convince you to think what they want you to think.

Listen. Obey. Consume. Watch Television.

People who can't see this are their target audience.
 
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The Joker

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Conky!!


PS - People on Trump's level, or hillary's for that matter, do not go to jail, regardless of what they do.

PPS - The powers that run Netflix have a political agenda, especially when it comes to crime and punishment.
Their "documentaries" often omit any info that does not fit the narrative they are pushing.
Some of their films are not made to entertain or inform you,
they're made to convince you to think what they want you to think.

Listen. Obey. Consume. Watch Television.

People who can't see this are their target audience.

McEnroe
 

footlong

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You just replied to yourself. Time to take your pills.

That explains all his delusional posts. I thought he was just a ninnyhammer, turns out he?s a bona fide nutter. Maybe the low six figure shrink can help him ???
 

Cie

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It's simple, resisting greatly increases your risk of major bodily harm during an arrest. None of these cops are hunting black people.
 

WhatsHisNuts

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It's simple, resisting greatly increases your risk of major bodily harm during an arrest. None of these cops are hunting black people.

I think we can all agree on that. The other side of the coin is that resisting arrest doesn't justify lethal force and dismissing that with "they shouldn't resist in the first place" is the reason people are protesting/rioting/looting. Nothing changes if nothing changes.
 

REFLOG

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I think we can all agree on that. The other side of the coin is that resisting arrest doesn't justify lethal force and dismissing that with "they shouldn't resist in the first place" is the reason people are protesting/rioting/looting. Nothing changes if nothing changes.

Other side of the coin? There is no coin!
 

lowell

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So you are saying they are protesting to make resisting arrest legal? Got it:0003

DA in Oakland says the rioters are only taking items they need. We all do need a Rolex
and several pairs of Lebum Nikes.
 

Sportsaholic

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This is the exact attitude that people are protesting.


I think most people (you?ll never have all) agree the field needs to be balanced.....Who is the person to put it all together, beats me....This has been going on since I can remember and not one administration has met it head on....

You can?t have a society without law and order, someone needs to figure this out in a hurry before there is more bloodshed...
 

WhatsHisNuts

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So you are saying they are protesting to make resisting arrest legal? Got it:0003

Nobody is saying anything of the sort. Resisting arrest has a penalty that comes with it, and as of now, it isn't supposed to be death. The looters/rioters (most of you don't distinguish them from the protesters but they are different) should be thrown in jail, and so should the cops that use excessive/deadly force. This isn't hard.
 

Sportsaholic

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I agree 100%, but you can't say we need law and order out of one side of your mouth then justify the police's use of excessive force out the other.


I'm not justifying any excessive force, if the facts of the investigation shows that by all means charge them....

In the same token, the resisting is black & white and it needs to be addressed....:0003
 
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