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Starved Rock Murderer Weger must never be granted parole

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To the Editor:

The Starved Rock Murderer should spend the rest of his life in prison and leave only occupying a hearse to bring him to be placed in the ground somewhere where his soul will descend to hell and forever suffer for the brutal, unnecessary murders of three middle-aged women.

He killed them by brutally beating them with a tree stump and causing such a distortion of their features that when I first reviewed the photographs, it was difficult for me to believe that these were human beings and/or that the condition of each of them, their bodies, was not the result of ravishing by some unknown creature that could not be human.

I was right and I was wrong. The killer possessed a body of a human but the mind and the soul of an animal.

That animal could soon be released back to the site of his horrendous cruelty if the rumor is true that the Parole Board will soon parole this “monster-man” and bring him back among the citizens of La Salle County and the citizens of the Starved Rock area, where this all began.

The Parole Board should not trump the decision of a La Salle County jury, which found this defendant should spend the rest of his life in prison. This finding came following six weeks of testimony, which included the testimony of members of the murdered victims’ families and the impact that these murders had on each of those families from the day they were committed until this day, taking in generations of those family members that were not in existence at the time of this brutality.

As long as I have been knowledgeable of Weger’s intentions to seek parole and have testified many times before the Parole Board, I was always very confident that the Parole Board would deny any effort on the part of Weger to leave confinement. I have not, in my time either as a prosecutor or as a lawyer up to the present time, known of any Parole Board releasing anyone on parole that would not admit and stands fast in denying the commission of the crime. To do so will give the impression to many people that the paroled defendant wins out and that, in fact, he, as he has persisted, was not guilty of the crime of which he was found to be guilty by a jury of his peers.

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