#1 2007-11-06 17:43:54

Ok, I'm not even posting this for the subject matter.  Apparently someone who writes sentences about as complex as the average 2nd grader gets paid to call herself a reporter.  George Orr will blow a gasket.  Taint will be amused.  Choad probably won't be surprised.  Here it is.  Enjoy.

Former Substitute Teacher Accused of Having Sex With Teenage Student to Go to Trial 

Posted: 8:11 PM Nov 5, 2007
Last Updated: 8:11 PM Nov 5, 2007
Reporter: Katie Heinz
Email Address: katie.heinz@weau.com
 
A former Prescott substitute teacher was fired. Now, she faces felony charges for having sex with a 13-year old student.

A Pierce County judge ruled the case will go to trial.

Thirty-nine-year-old Anne Knopf is charged with felony sexual assault of a child under the age of 16.

Anne Knopf isn't in jail. The judge released her on a $25,000 signature bond. Monday, she was fingerprinted and jailers took her mug shot at the Pierce County Sheriff's Department. The judge says she cannot have any contact with the boy or his family.

"We take these cases very seriously, the potential penalty is very serious," said Pierce County District Attorney John O'Boyle. "But this case is still in its infant stages, with the preliminary hearing down the road. There's nothing to prove guilt yet."

"It's really not the time to make any comments about the allegations," said Knopf's defense attorney Fred Bruno.

Knopf is accused of having sex with a 13-year-old male student, between January 1 and May 18 of this year.

The criminal complaint states the boy drove his mother's vehicle to Knopf's rural Ellsworth home, once a week, for about four or five weeks.

Court records show this happened between 11:00 p.m. and 1:00 a.m., when the two would kiss and have sex.

The complaint also states the two would e-mail and instant message each other.

For the past two years, Knopf worked as a substitute teacher in the Prescott School District, including at the middle school, where the boy is a student.

"Nothing indicates anything happened at school but having found out the allegations, we take them very seriously," said Prescott School District Superintendent Roger Hulne. "She's a substitute teacher and we suspended her immediately from the school district."

Hulne says that suspension later turned into a termination: he says Knopf no longer works for the district.

Knopf will be in court again November 20.

Her defense attorney says she will plead "not guilty" then.

If convicted, Knopf could face up to 40 years in prison.

Bonus:  here's a photo of the peducator.

http://img410.imageshack.us/img410/932/knowpfqc2.jpg

Last edited by headkicker_girl (2007-11-06 17:44:20)

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#2 2007-11-06 17:49:09

I've been editing recipes all morning, written by retards from America's heartland.

Thanks, Headkick. I needed that.

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#3 2007-11-06 17:51:47

headkicker_girl wrote:

Bonus:  here's a photo of the peducator.

http://img410.imageshack.us/img410/932/knowpfqc2.jpg

Sweet. Your new site's first cover girl!

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#5 2007-11-06 18:16:15

My guess: recent journalism major grad from a small state college. Probably wrote for her high school newspaper. The police ride-along she did during her internship at some mid-sized daily not too far from her parents' home is the most exciting thing she's done to date.

You know, Headkick, strychnine is probably less painful.

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#6 2007-11-06 18:24:05

Taint wrote:

You know, Headkick, strychnine is probably less painful.

I know...but it's like a hangnail or a blister...you know you shouldn't pick at it, but you just can't help yourself!

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#7 2007-11-06 18:53:42

I was just wondering if someone was pranking with this piece, right down to the mugshot, or if I need to take another oxycodone  & stop being such a critical asshole.  It has a bit more structural variety than Katie's work, but something tells me that's not deliberate.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21581811/

Grieving husbands or calculating killers?
The search for Stacy Peterson begins at home
MSNBC video


COMMENTARY
By Clint Van Zandt
MSNBC
updated 4:59 p.m. ET, Mon., Nov. 5, 2007
 
http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Bylines/mugs/MSNBC%20Cable/msnbc_van_zandt_clint.thumb.jpg
Clint Van Zandt


Drew Peterson, a 53-year-old Bolingbrook, Ill. police sergeant, is scheduled to retire in less than two weeks. Retirement is normally a happy time. But instead, he contemplates a missing wife and the reason she may have gone missing. 

Stacy Peterson, 23, is Sgt. Peterson’s fourth wife, someone he met when she was a 17-year-old local Bolingbrook town employee. He left his then-40-year-old wife, Kathleen Savio, and their two children to ultimately marry after Stacy after she got pregnant.


A history of violence, another dead wife
Sgt. Peterson appears to have a history of challenged relationships and bad luck. While little is known concerning his first two marriages, we know he met Kathleen in the early 1990s. 

But within five years of their marriage, someone started sending Kathleen letters suggesting that her husband was having an affair, something which resulted in her filing for divorce. This was due in part to Drew's relationship with the future Mrs. Stacy Peterson. 

Sgt. Peterson was alleged to have beaten his third wife severely enough to send her to the hospital, to have threatened to kill her and to have held a knife to her throat. According to Mrs. Peterson No. 3, who once obtained a restraining order against her husband and who would go on to divorce him in 2004, he wanted her dead and he had stated “he would burn her house down to shut her up.”

Evidently, Sgt. Peterson got his wish for Kathleen to shut up, and sometime after their divorce, she was found drowned in an empty bathtub in her home. Her ex-husband was allegedly returning their two children to Kathleen when he found the doors to her home locked.  He went to a neighbor’s house, summoned a locksmith who eventually opened the door to Kathleen’s home. He then had a neighbor search the house.  It was the neighbor who found Kathleen’s body in the tub. 

The question is this: Is this the normal response of a trained police officer, or of someone who knows how to take his time, how to stage a crime scene, and how to create plausible deniability while establishing a workable alibi?

We know that many people die of freak accidents. Others, on the other hand, may be the victim of a crime of passion in which one partner takes out his anger, frustration and rage on the other (sometimes resulting in an unplanned assault that may even lead to death). Lastly there are boyfriends or husbands who make up their mind that they want a physical divorce, but don't want the legal and financial responsibilities attached to such an action. 

That kind of man
When you think of this type of person, think of Californian Scott Peterson in the death of his pregnant wife, Laci. Or actor Robert Blake, who was charged, but later acquitted of the murder of his wife, Bonnie Lee Bakley. And then there’s the case of Utah resident Mark Hacking who shot his wife in her sleep, disposing of her body in a Dumpster on its way to the landfill. 

These crimes or suspected crimes may have all had an element of anger and rage, but they also had an element of planning.  The murdererad thought out the disposal of his victim’s body, or at least considered how to cover his tracks and his DNA.       


The death of Kathleen Savio (Peterson) was ruled an accidental drowning, with the local medical examiner suggesting, evidently, that she somehow injured herself and drowned in a tub full of water, with the water then draining from the tub. Her hair was wet and her fingers were wrinkled as if having been exposed to water. 

Some might question her death in light of the threats made against her life, while others might consider how easy it would be to cause someone to drown in a tub, this by holding their head under water, or by simply pulling their feet above the water causing their head to go under.  One or two minutes at most and an adult or child could drown in this manner, something that would be far from an accident.  The circumstances surrounding the death of Kathleen Savio are now being reconsidered by the local district attorney, especially in light of the missing status of the current Mrs Peterson.


Clues: Did Stacy leave or disappear?
Stacy Peterson's husband has said that she left last Sunday morning to meet someone, and that she called him at 9 p.m. that same evening to indicate where the family car could be found.  “She was in a snooty mood,” when she called, her husband said. No one has heard from her since this reported contact. She allegedly left in her red jogging suit and her children, ages 2 and 4, and her family continue to wait for word. At least one person has portrayed the relationship between Sgt. Peterson and Stacy as “strained,” a characterization that could also fit his former relationship with wife No. 3.  Stacy’s living sister has stated that Stacy “lived in fear of her husband,” and that “she wanted a divorce.” 

Sgt. Peterson, meanwhile, has stated his belief that Stacy left him for another man, further suggesting that she took with her extra clothes and her cell phone. He has said that she was seeing a psychiatrist and had been prescribed anti-anxiety drugs. He also points out that Stacy’s mother allegedly disappeared 10 years ago, an act that Stacy may just have copied from her mother. “She was where she wants to be,” says her husband.

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