Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
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Offline LoriDavis

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RE: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #30 on: October 05, 2008, 09:56:30 PM »
http://www.madison.com/tct/news/stories/300250%20Former%20UW%20Student%20Pleads

Former UW student pleads to role in moving hundreds of pounds of weed
Kevin Murphy
Correspondent for The Capital Times  —  8/12/2008 8:19 am

A former Madison man in the middle of a marijuana sales network that moved at least one ton of pot between 2000 and July 2003 pleaded guilty Monday in federal court to conspiring to distribute a controlled substance with a second man who's suspected of involvement in an unsolved murder.

Brian Hutchinson, now of Fontana, Wis., was a UW-Madison student in August 2000 when he moved into a house on Wingra Avenue shared with the second man, Reed Rogala, who was already heavily involved in marijuana trafficking, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Graber.

Rogala had a source in New York state who sent him 90 to 100 pounds of marijuana every two or three weeks mainly during the fall and winter months. At first Hutchinson bought small amounts of marijuana from Rogala but then began to take up to 30 pounds of each shipment and sell it, Graber said.

Rogala moved to Vermont in 2001, but kept his Madison customer base by having marijuana sent to Hutchinson, and by flying to Madison where Rogala met his drivers and took the rest of the load to his second main customer in Madison, Graber said.

Hutchinson left Madison in 2003, "leaving a lot of money behind," said his attorney Jordan Loeb, moved to Portland, Ore., and began delivering for an organic grocery store.

Hutchinson admitted to District Judge Barbara Crabb that he bought marijuana from Rogala beginning in 2000 and sold it to several customers in the Madison area.

While Hutchinson was charged with delivery of 100 kilograms or more of marijuana, co-conspirator Rogala, 32, of South Orange, N.J. was charged this year in federal court with conspiring to distribute 2,200 pounds or more of marijuana.

Rogala pleaded guilty in June to a marijuana conspiracy charge and struck a deal with the government to cooperate in its investigation into the conspiracy. While the government agreed not to directly use any of Rogala's statements against him in the marijuana case, it excluded any information he reveals regarding the murder of Amos Mortier, of Fitchburg.

Mortier vanished on Nov. 8, 2004, the date Rogala's indictment states the marijuana conspiracy ended. There are no statements in public court documents that link Hutchinson to Mortier's murder and little in Rogala's except the brief mention in Rogala's plea agreement, which was executed in December but not filed with the court until June 12.

Hutchinson struck a plea deal in November and has cooperated with the government ever since, even flying back to Madison for debriefing sessions, said Graber.

Crabb cited Hutchinson's cooperation in deciding to exempt him from mandatory detention prior to his sentencing on Nov. 29. Hutchinson faces five to 40 years in prison.

Rogala is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 4. He faces a minimum of 10 years in prison and has agreed to a $100,000 fine.
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Offline LoriDavis

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RE: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #31 on: October 05, 2008, 10:02:14 PM »
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/305426

Guilty plea in marijuana case
By ED TRELEVEN 608-252-6134
WED., SEP 17, 2008 - 11:49 PM
etreleven@madison.com

A UW-Madison graduate and friend of a missing Fitchburg man pleaded guilty Wednesday in federal court to taking part in a large scale marijuana distribution ring.

Destin Layne, 30, of Brooklyn, N.Y., who was a friend of Amos Mortier, 27, at the time he disappeared from his Fitchburg home under mysterious circumstances in 2004, admitted involvement in a distribution conspiracy involving other former UW-Madison students that brought thousands of pounds of marijuana to Madison from the East Coast.

Layne faces up to five years in prison, but under a plea agreement prosecutors would seek sentence reductions for her acceptance of responsibility and other reductions if she provides help to investigators. Layne is scheduled to be sentenced by U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb on Dec. 11.
 
• 2 More Allegedly Part Of Pot Ring (Aug. 30) 
 
Layne was the girlfriend of Reed Rogala, 32, of South Orange, N.J., who has also pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to taking part in the scheme. Rogala is in Dane County Jail awaiting sentencing on Nov. 6.

A written plea agreement for Layne makes no mention of Mortier, nor was he mentioned in court on Wednesday, but Rogala's written plea agreement stipulated that no statements he made would be used against him, except those pertaining to his "involvement, if any, in the murder of Amos Mortier."

Mortier was last seen on Nov. 8, 2004.

Investigators who have been trying for nearly four years to find out what happened to Mortier, including former Dane County Sheriff's Detective David Bongiovani and Fitchburg police Detective Shannan Sheil-Morgan, were present in the courtroom Wednesday when Layne pleaded guilty.

Layne's role, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Graber, was to use her near East Side home as a collection and distribution point for marijuana shipments brought in from the East Coast after Rogala left Madison for Vermont and after Rogala's former roommate, Brian Hutchinson, moved to the state of Oregon in 2003. Layne also sent money made from the sale of marijuana to Rogala, with whom she still was involved in a long-distance relationship, Graber said.

In all, six people have been charged or indicted in the conspiracy case. Two other friends of Mortier, Jacob Stadfeld, 32, and Brent Delzer, 34, are scheduled to be arraigned on conspiracy charges today after they were indicted last month by a grand jury.

Hutchinson, 34, has pleaded guilty to taking part in the conspiracy and is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 29. Another man, Hal Taback, who was allegedly among Rogala's marijuana sources has also been charged with involvement in the conspiracy but no court dates have been scheduled.
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Offline LoriDavis

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RE: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #32 on: October 05, 2008, 10:03:27 PM »
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/302768

Two indicted in marijuana conspiracy case
ED TRELEVEN
FRI., AUG 29, 2008 - 10:58 PM
608-252-6134
etreleven@madison.com

Two friends of a missing Fitchburg man were indicted Thursday by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring to distribute large amounts of marijuana, bringing to six the number of people charged in relation to the case.

The indictments for Jacob Stadfeld, 32, and Brent Delzer, 34, were filed Friday in U.S. District Court. The indictments allege that the two conspired between themselves and others to distribute marijuana from about 2000 until Nov. 8, 2004.

That's the date that Amos Mortier was last seen before he vanished from his home in Fitchburg, leaving his dog running outside and a record spinning on his turntable.

It is unclear how the marijuana conspiracy is related to Mortier's disappearance. However, a plea agreement for Reed Rogala, 32, of South Orange, N.J., who pleaded guilty in June to involvement in a marijuana distribution conspiracy, gives Rogala immunity for any further statements he makes, except those pertaining to his "involvement, if any, in the murder of Amos Mortier."

In search warrants filed in 2005, Delzer told Fitchburg police that over the previous two years, he had sold "pounds" of marijuana for Mortier. He also said that Mortier was owed $90,000 by Stadfeld for marijuana that Mortier had given him to sell.

Delzer also told police, according to the warrants, that four or five days before Mortier was last seen, he was at Mortier's home when Mortier received a phone call and began to yell that someone owed him money. That surprised Delzer, the search warrants state, because he had never heard Mortier yell.

Phone records showed that the call may have been from Stadfeld, warrants state.

Police also interviewed Stadfeld about cell phone calls he made to Mortier on the day he vanished and the days prior.

Other friends of Mortier have also been charged with involvement in a marijuana distribution conspiracy. Destin Layne, 30, who described herself as a mentor to Mortier, was charged on Aug. 12 and is set for a plea hearing on Sept. 17.

Rogala, a former UW-Madison student, will be sentenced on Nov. 6. Rogala's former roommate, Brian Hutchinson, also a former UW-Madison student, entered a guilty plea on Aug. 11 and will be sentenced on Oct. 29.

Federal prosecutors on Aug. 14 also charged Hal Taback with involvement in the conspiracy.

According to information presented by prosecutors in court during Hutchinson's plea hearing, Taback was among Rogala's sources for marijuana in New York, which Rogala had brought to Madison in hundred-pound loads by hired couriers.


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« Last Edit: October 22, 2008, 11:19:22 AM by Jenn »
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Offline Denise

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #33 on: December 05, 2008, 01:16:45 AM »
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/317255

Drug case prosecutors seek alibis in Mortier disappearance

By ED TRELEVEN
etreleven@madison.com

Federal prosecutors handling a large-scale marijuana distribution case, one tied to the disappearance of Amos Mortier from his Fitchburg home four years ago, have asked two defendants to tell them where they were when Mortier vanished.

But attorneys for Brent Delzer and Jacob Stadfeld said Thursday that because their clients aren't charged with anything having to do with Mortier's absence, their whereabouts is irrelevant.

Prosecutors have never said openly how closely tied the conspiracy is to the disappearance of Mortier, 27, who was last seen on Nov. 8, 2004. Instead, there have only been hints at the ties between the drug case and Mortier's disappearance, found in scattered court documents related to other defendants tied to the case.

One of those documents makes a passing reference to "the murder of Amos Mortier."

Unlike the other defendants in the drug case, who are being prosecuted under charge-and-plea deals tied to cooperation with investigators, Delzer, 35, and Stadfeld, 32, both of the Madison area, were indicted by a grand jury for allegedly taking part in a conspiracy to distribute hundreds of pounds of marijuana that had been brought to Wisconsin from Canada through East Coast distributors.

Delzer and Stadfeld were charged with being part of the conspiracy from about 2000 to Nov. 8, 2004 — the day Mortier was last seen.

On Nov. 20, Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Graber requested a notice of alibi from Delzer and Stadfeld, asking for the "specific time and place where each defendant claims to have been" on Nov. 8, 2004, between noon and 5 p.m. He also asked for the name, address and phone number of each person on whom the alibis are based.

Graber could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Delzer's attorney, Jeff Nichols, responded in court papers Thursday that Mortier is not named as a co-conspirator in the indictment, and the indictment doesn't allege that either Delzer or Stadfeld was involved in Mortier's disappearance.

"Absent some allegation of specific wrongdoing by the defendants on Nov. 8, 2004, to further the alleged conspiracy, a notice of alibi for that date is not relevant," Nichols wrote.

He said prosecutors have not alleged anything more specific about that date other than that is the date the drug conspiracy is alleged to have ended. And without a bill of particulars from the government, Nichols wrote, his client "cannot know specifically what criminal activity he is alleged to have engaged in on that date."

Stadfeld's attorney, Ernesto Chavez, said he plans to join Nichols in opposing the government's alibi request.

"There's no evidence my client took part in that," Chavez said. "There's no evidence they even know it's a homicide. It's a little tricky. We think there are other reasons."

Chavez and Nichols will also file motions to dismiss the indictments against their clients, citing non-prosecution agreements that prosecutors have with the men. Prosecutors maintain that Delzer and Stadfeld breached those agreements.

The defense attorneys also want to push back a hearing on the issue set for later this month because they need more time to prepare.

Offline LoriDavis

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #34 on: January 11, 2009, 06:17:36 PM »
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/431983

Break in Mortier disappearance elusive
ED TRELEVEN
SAT., JAN 10, 2009 - 10:06 PM

As members of a marijuana conspiracy that involved missing Fitchburg man Amos Mortier are sent off to prison, police trying to solve his presumed murder hope that the drug prosecutions will bring in tips or loosen tongues that have been silent for four years.

"We don't have any big breaks in the case," Fitchburg police Lt. Todd Stetzer conceded this week. But he said he hopes people will talk as word gets around of the prison sentences, including a 12½-year drug conspiracy sentence on Tuesday for Reed Rogala, a former associate of Mortier who ran a group of couriers bringing Canadian marijuana to Madison from 2000 to late 2004.

"As people that were involved in drug dealing or involved with Amos continue to see people they were associated with get sentenced to lengthy prison sentences," Stetzer said, "we hope they'll say 'I don't want that to happen to me' and tell us what they know."
 
• Man sentenced for running pot network
• Federal prosecutors refer to Mortier disappearance 
 
Mortier, 27, vanished on Nov. 8, 2004, leaving his dog, Gnosis, running loose, his stereo on and valuables such as his wallet in his house. Fitchburg police have been trying since then to find out what happened to Mortier.

Stetzer said the federal case has been beneficial "in that it's continued to provide information" that could help solve the apparent murder of Mortier.

Tainted by suspicion?
Lawyers for two of Mortier's alleged former associates, now awaiting trial on federal drug charges, have said they are concerned their clients will be unfairly tarred with suspicion in Mortier's disappearance and presumed death.

Police have long had an interest in Jacob Stadfeld, 32, in connection with Mortier's disappearance, search warrants issued in 2004 and 2005 indicate. Last month federal prosecutors asked Stadfeld and Brent Delzer, 35, to account for their whereabouts on Nov. 8, 2004, when Mortier is believed to have vanished. Prosecutors soon withdrew the request.

On Tuesday, Delzer's attorney, Jeff Nichols, demanded to know why that request had been made. Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Graber said emphatically that Mortier's apparent homicide is not part of the federal drug case but belongs to state prosecutors. The date on the alibi request, he said, was merely when the drug conspiracy between those charged is alleged to have ended.

Gathering evidence?
Stadfeld's attorney, Ernesto Chavez, wrote in a recent court filing that he believes police "have been electronically monitoring, or using surrogates to monitor, Stadfeld's whereabouts and communications."

"This would be to gather evidence of his statements and activities to support both the federal prosecution and any successive state prosecution," Chavez wrote in an affidavit.

The affidavit was related to yet another dispute in the case, this one over whether authorities granted Stadfeld immunity from prosecution on drug charges when he talked about the marijuana scheme early in the Mortier investigation.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Graber said in court this week that he believes Stadfeld breached the informal, oral agreement by not telling police everything he knew.

Pot from Canada
The federal marijuana prosecutions in Madison are part of a much broader series of prosecutions by American and Canadian authorities aimed at multimillion dollar schemes to import indoor-grown marijuana from Canada.

Prosecutions in federal courts in northern New York, Maine and Vermont and have resulted in prison terms for more than 25 people, including some with close Madison connections.

Two Canadians are believed to have been leaders in creating the supply of pot that made its way to Madison. In Maine, Daniel Lapierre, 60, of Montreal, pleaded guilty in December 2006 to conspiracy to import and distribute marijuana and money laundering. He was sentenced to 12 years and agreed to surrender $4 million.

Among the 11 people indicted with Lapierre is a New York City man, Thomas Blondet, 29, who is serving 9½ years for acting as a drug courier for Lapierre. Blondet testified before a federal grand jury in Wisconsin.

Cigarette smuggling
In New York, prosecutors said, Canadian William "Hank" Cook, 32, and his American business partner, Peter Johnson, 37, funded their marijuana export business with proceeds of cigarette smuggling. Cigarettes were made for the black market at their factory in the U.S. and then smuggled into Canada, where high taxes make legitimate cigarettes very pricey.

Prosecutors said Cook and Johnson supplied pot to Alexander Cammacho, who smuggled the drugs into the U.S. He and Anthony DeJohn both lived on Indian reservations in upstate New York to take advantage of a lack of law enforcement oversight to run their business from the reservations, prosecutors said.

Johnson is still awaiting sentencing. Cammacho, one of 15 charged in another case, is serving a 12½-year prison sentence on a drug conviction, while DeJohn and Cook are awaiting trials.

In both alleged conspiracies, marijuana was hidden in luggage and smuggled into the U.S. across the St. Lawrence River — by automobile, boat and even by snowmobile in the winter — where it was picked up by couriers and driven for distribution in several states, according to court records.

Federal prosecutors in Madison say the Cook and Lapierre groups were among the sources for the thousands of pounds of marijuana that Rogala's couriers brought to Madison in monthly hundred-pound shipments. Rogala's ex-girlfriend, Destin Layne — like Rogala a former UW-Madison student — will be sentenced in Madison on Jan. 27. Brian Hutchinson, who was also associated with Rogala in Madison, is serving a two-year prison sentence for taking part in the marijuana conspiracy.
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Offline LoriDavis

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #35 on: February 12, 2009, 03:56:55 PM »
http://www.channel3000.com/news/18701805/detail.html

Writer: Madison Man Might Have Killed Missing Fitchburg Resident
Mortier Disappearance Sparked Drug Investigation, Grand Jury

UPDATED: 2:34 pm CST February 12, 2009

ITCHBURG, Wis. -- A former Madison freelance writer said that he has found more information about the four-year-old disappearance and presumed killing of a Fitchburg man.

Nathan Comp, who now lives in Philadelphia, said he has uncovered evidence that a 41-year-old Madison man might have killed Amos Mortier and dumped his body on a hog farm.

Comp said an unidentified source close to the case gave him sealed grand jury testimony and other documents that point to the man as a prime suspect who was never properly investigated.

Comp said that a 2006 witness to a grand jury investigating a marijuana ring testified a Madison man, dubbed "Brad Green" by Comp, admitted to him that he'd stabbed Mortier and dumped his body at a pig farm near Poynette because pigs "eat bones."

Comp said that he has talked to Green and that he has denied any wrongdoing. Comp said federal and local police have never properly investigated him or checked his house or vehicle for evidence. He said even Green admits he wasn't asked where he was the day Mortier disappeared.

Comp said that the witness has said Green killed Mortier because he owed him a large sum of money for some marijuana and because Mortier had money in his Fitchburg house.

Mortier's disappearance sparked a massive drug investigation and federal grand jury, WISC-TV reported.

Previously, a man currently indicted on drug charges, Jacob Stadfeld, was considered a suspect in the disappearance of Mortier, but he has never been arrested for it.
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Offline Denise

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #36 on: February 15, 2009, 11:23:45 AM »
http://www.thedailypage.com/daily/article.php?article=25099

What happened to Amos?
Secret John Doe inquiry centers on marijuana selling and the ‘high probability’ that Mortier was murdered

Jason Shepard on Thursday 02/12/2009 10:00 am

When the hip-hop group Jurassic 5 played a concert in San Bernardino, Calif., in late June, friends of Amos Mortier hoped he’d be spotted in the crowd: disoriented, homeless, stricken with amnesia, perhaps even hiding from people wanting to do him harm.

The band was among Mortier’s favorites. Eerily, his mother says it was a Jurassic 5 album that friends found spinning endlessly on his turntable when they entered his Fitchburg home last Nov. 13, days after he seems to have vanished.

If Mortier was stricken with memory problems or on the run traveling the country hanging out at music festivals, this might be a good spot to find him. But missing-persons fliers posted at the event and shown to local sheriff’s deputies failed to turn up any new leads.

Mortier, who was 27 when he disappeared, attended classes at Madison Area Technical College, shopped at the Willy Street Co-op, frequented the Inferno, and had worked at the Den and Shakti, two shops on State Street in downtown Madison.

He was last seen eight months ago. As time has gone on, friends have prepared themselves for the worst, especially after Fitchburg police announced this April that they were considering the case a homicide.

Then, last month, three nurses reported seeing a man who matched Mortier’s general description at a Tennessee music festival that included bands he liked. He appeared disoriented and complained about memory problems. The tip was phoned to Mortier’s mother, Margie Milutinovich, whose cell phone number is plastered on hundreds of posters across the country and on the Web site findamos.com.

Milutinovich called the Fitchburg Police Department, which in turn contacted local Tennessee police. They canvassed area campgrounds and distributed more posters, but were unable to locate the man.

Police have been careful not to discredit the tip, in part in deference to Milutinovich, who’s left her job as an information technology contractor to devote herself to finding her son. She’s created posters, hired a private investigator, contacted psychics, and forged alliances with missing-person groups around the country.

Milutinovich believes her son may be out there, surviving somehow with no memory of his family or life in Dane County. But the police, while continuing to pursue every lead, are clearly investigating this as a likely homicide. It remains a high-priority case.

"We have dedicated personnel to this case 24 hours a day, seven days a week, since its inception and have no plans to turn back," says Fitchburg Police Lt. Todd Stetzer, who is supervising case detectives. "There continues to be additional information that’s gained on a daily basis. This is a very fluid, real active investigation."

The case is the subject of a John Doe inquiry, an unusual court proceeding that takes place in closed court, and witnesses have been instructed not to reveal anything about the inquiry. But several agreed to talk to Isthmus on condition that their names not be published. Other new information on the case was obtained from interviews with family, friends, attorneys, police and others, as well as a review of court documents.

A police official with direct knowledge of the case confirmed the accuracy of this new information.

Isthmus has learned that the John Doe probe has focused on evidence of a drug conspiracy involving several of Mortier’s friends and acquaintances. Some attested in court that Mortier was selling large quantities of marijuana while struggling with debts related to this activity.

Two of these friends and acquaintances were granted immunity for their testimony. Many others testified without such guarantees of freedom from prosecution. Among them is an individual one law enforcement official has called a "prime suspect" in Mortier’s presumed murder. The suspect, an owner of a Madison music-related business, allegedly sold large quantities of marijuana with Mortier and owed Mortier money. Like several other friends and associates, he has retained an attorney.

A search of court records reveals that many of Mortier’s friends and acquaintances have been convicted of drug crimes, ranging from simple marijuana possession to heroin distribution. At least three have convictions for possessing marijuana with intent to deliver. One, who was in jail with work-release privileges at the time Mortier disappeared, has a conviction for attempted murder.

Did these drug connections get Mortier killed? Or did he realize his life was in danger and decide to disappear? Did he suffer some mental catastrophe that caused him to forget his own identity?

What is known for sure is that on Nov. 8, 2004, Amos Mortier left his apartment in a hurry. His friends and family have not seen him since.

‘A very kind soul’

Before his disappearance, Mortier was attending classes in ecology and botany at MATC, where he hoped to earn good grades and transfer to a university. His mother says he previously took classes at MATC in electrical circuitry, and had expressed regret about not setting on an education path earlier.

"I told him not to worry," Milutinovich says. "Some of us wander for many years, and some of us die wandering, never knowing what we really want to do in life."

Mortier was an outdoors enthusiast who loved camping, hiking and taking long walks with his beloved Husky-mix dog, Gnosis. While outdoors, he liked to identify trees and birds. He enjoyed fishing and liked to garden.

"He grew up pretty much in the woods," his mother says.

Mortier was also a music buff. He played the harmonica and loved the blues, as well as electronic music and hip hop. "His music collection is as vast physically as it is musically," says Milutinovich. "Some call tapping a stick on a table annoying. Amos would probably call that music."

One friend, who met him through a sustainable-energy conference several years ago, remembers Amos’ quiet compassion. "He was just a very kind soul," she says.

The two kept in touch in part because of their environmental interests, and she helped him land an internship at Growing Power, an urban organic farm in Milwaukee. "He was really excited about going to school and getting an education," she says. "I felt at the time I met him he was changing his life."

Another friend felt a "magnetic connection" with Mortier from their first meeting: "He’s just got a really wonderful personality. He’s very kind, passionate and generous. I mean, he’s the kind of guy that anyone would want as a friend."

Besides paying rent on his house, Mortier owned several vehicles and was making payments on land in Stitzer, about 75 miles west of Madison, where he had a mobile home. But at the time of his disappearance last fall, as far as police have been able to determine, his only legal income apparently came from doing odd electrical contracting jobs and selling homemade jewelry.

Vanished without a trace

On Nov. 6, 2004, a Saturday, Mortier went hiking with two friends and his dog. Afterwards, they returned to Mortier’s ranch-style townhouse at 5078 Lacy Rd., in a rural part of Fitchburg, for dinner. One of those friends, a 36-year-old Madison restaurant worker, noticed nothing unusual.

Mortier had complained about a broken coffee maker. The following Monday, the friend found a French press unit at Goodwill for a dollar, and called Mortier with this news. Mortier didn’t call back.

"I was kind of perturbed when I didn’t hear from him," the friend says.

Mortier also missed a dinner date on Tuesday, Nov. 9, and failed to show up for a class exam on Wednesday. On Nov. 13, after several days without word from Mortier, the friend and another concerned about Mortier stopped by Mortier’s house. The front door was locked, but a side door through the garage was open. They entered the dark house using a flashlight.

"We were prepared for the worst, but he wasn’t there," says the friend. "Although his turntables -- and this was what was really freaky -- were spinning around and around with abrasive noise coming through the speakers, like an end-of-the-record kind of a noise."

Mortier’s friends found a check in his apartment that listed his grandparents’ address. They eventually tracked down Mortier’s mother, on Sunday, Nov. 14. Police were called in the morning.

At first, the police launched a search-and-rescue mission. They noted that Mortier’s two cars -– as well as his coat, wallet and backpack -- were left behind. But Gnosis was missing, and Mortier’s friends said the dog had a habit of bolting if he wasn’t on a leash. That Mortier chased after Gnosis was not improbable.

But the case, says Lt. Stetzer, "started to take on a different context" when police realized that Mortier hadn’t been seen for almost a week, during which his cell phone was not used.

Gnosis was found at a neighbor’s house. Friends don’t believe Mortier would have willingly left his dog.

In the days after Mortier’s disappearance was reported, search crews scoured swampland near his home, hoping he might still be found, injured or disoriented. His mother wondered if he could have been hit by a speeding car.

"It’s a horrible thought, but people have been known to try to hide the person they hit," she says. "I am trying to think of theories. People driving incredibly fast -- Amos chasing after Gnosis -- definitely a hit-and-run theory is an option."

Mortier’s disappearance generated some media coverage, but it was nothing compared to that of Audrey Seiler, a UW-Madison student who went missing in early 2004. That case prompted a massive search that was covered for days by national cable news networks. Seiler was found unharmed and later admitted to faking her abduction.

About 30 tips a day regarding Mortier poured into the police hotline. A billboard went up on the Beltline with two photos of Mortier and the phone number for police, generating more tips. But as time went on, it became harder for friends to remain optimistic.

"The first thing you think of is that he’s hurt," says one friend. "He’s outside. He’s injured. And then, after that, it’s just shock. To have a friend just disappear and to not know what happened to him, it’s just the most awful feeling."   

Was it over drugs?

Within days, investigators started to look at more sinister possibilities. Says Stetzer, "There were certain things that were not consistent with just wandering away with a medical condition."

By the time police arrived at Mortier’s house, friends later admitted, they had removed some incriminating items, including jars of marijuana. Police won’t publicly confirm such details. But, Stetzer admits, "Friends had access to the house during the time Amos went missing. I would not classify it as a pristine crime scene."

On Nov. 20, the case’s two lead detectives showed up at the town of Dunn house that belonged to Jacob Falkner, one of Mortier’s closest friends. Falkner reportedly had not helped out in search efforts, which another friend had described to police as "strange."

Detectives Dave Bongiovani of the Dane County Sheriff’s Office and Shannan Sheil-Morgan of the Fitchburg Police Department immediately noticed a "strong smell" of marijuana emanating from the house. After being denied permission to search, they filed for a search warrant. It was one of almost a dozen sealed search warrants issued in November related to the case signed by Dane County Circuit Judge Shelley Gaylord, who recently extended the seal for another 180 days, a court official confirms.

The search turned up evidence of a sophisticated growing operation in the basement, including 373 marijuana plants. Detectives also found an underground room that had previously been the lower structure of a farm silo that contained grow lights, reflective foil, an intake fan equipped with an odor eliminator, and a security camera, according to a criminal complaint.

Falkner was arrested and, on Dec. 21, pleaded no contest to one count of manufacturing and delivery of marijuana. Several other charges, including maintaining a drug dwelling, were dismissed. Dane County Circuit Court Judge Stuart Schwartz withheld sentence and ordered Falkner to serve three years’ probation.

Eight days later, Falkner was back in the Dane County courthouse to testify in the secret John Doe hearing. He was one of two men granted immunity for their testimony, according to minutes of the hearing released by Dane County Circuit Court Judge Robert DeChambeau.

The hearing itself was kept secret until Dec. 30, when veteran Capital Times courts reporter Mike Miller broke the story of a John Doe inquiry into Mortier’s disappearance.

That inquiry, Isthmus has learned, has had at least two sessions: one in December and one in April, just days after police held a press conference intended in part to shake upcoming testimony in the secret inquiry. Both sessions were led by Corey Stephan, an assistant district attorney specializing in drug crimes.

The investigation into Mortier’s disappearance has at times involved other law enforcement agencies, including the state Division of Criminal Investigation and the federal Drug Enforcement Agency. Sheriff’s departments in Columbia and Juneau counties have also been contacted.

By spring, police had interviewed several people who admitted buying marijuana from Mortier. One said Mortier was "a pretty heavy user of marijuana," while another told police his suppliers were part of "a very professional organization."

Some said Mortier was in need of money before he disappeared and that some friends were scrambling to come up with it. One suggested Mortier owed as much as $20,000 to a New York City drug supplier. Police also established that Mortier sold marijuana to at least one man in Milwaukee and may have had further drug connections there.

It’s possible none of these details -- many of which were revealed during the John Doe proceedings -- had anything to do with Mortier’s disappearance. But police have focused on them in their inquiry.

On April 13, Fitchburg police held a press conference to announce the probability that Mortier was murdered due to unspecified drug activity. His mother says she learned of these developments just minutes before.

While the press conference was held in part to keep the public informed, it was also meant to shake out new information.

"We know there are people out there with information who haven’t come forward, whatever their motives may be," says Stetzer, adding that every little bit helps. "There was additional information that was gained after the press conference that benefited the investigation."

Police submitted Mortier’s DNA to a national FBI missing-persons database, used by law enforcement agencies across the country when an unidentified body is found. Reports to the FBI, reviewed by Isthmus, indicate that police believe Mortier is "presumed dead" based on the "potential of his involvement in a drug conspiracy."

Just days after the press conference, police executed another round of searches. On April 19, they searched the home, office and vehicle of the Madison music-business owner whom police have internally identified as a "prime suspect" in the case.

One official said the man gave "inconsistent statements" about Mortier to the police. At least one friend told police the man owed Mortier money because he either stole money or skimmed proceeds from drug sales. And it’s possible, another told police, that Mortier had threatened to go to the police about the debt.

On May 24, investigators used a cadaver-sniffing dog to search land in Juneau County owned by the suspect’s parents. Some evidence was collected in the search of the man’s vehicle, but apparently nothing strong enough to prompt police to make an arrest. The man has four criminal convictions, two felony and two misdemeanor, all related to marijuana, court records show.

"I have a good idea of what happened to him," the man purportedly told police, "but I couldn’t tell you where a body is."

Police acknowledge this man remains on their list, along with others. "There’s still a pool of people who are persons of interest," Stetzer says. "There are some persons of interest who stand out above others."

The search goes on

Margie Milutinovich says she sometimes regrets ever calling the police to investigate her missing son. They’ve pried into his private life and have focused for months on a drug connection that Milutinovich says "seems the least likely" to explain her son’s disappearance.

"Anything that doesn’t go along with their drug theory gets very low priority, if any priority at all," she says. "Police, in general, tend to go down paths where there is a prosecution involved."

One friend is especially harsh about the police’s investigation: "I really think they’ve given up on looking for Amos. They’re more interested in getting another celebrity drug bust."

Stetzer is acutely aware of this criticism, and says it’s not fair: "You can’t get tunnel vision. In essence, the drugs, when they became apparent, were one line of investigation. A medical condition was and continues to be another direction. Taking off on his own because of stress continues to be another possibility. We’re looking at all those things."

He adds, "It appears this is a homicide investigation, but again, we’re not putting on blinders by saying that’s what it is. That’s a high probability at this point, but we’re still looking at other options."

Two of Mortier’s friends say the purported Tennessee sighting has given them, and the family, renewed hope that Mortier may still be alive. "This [has] made such a difference to everyone who knows Amos," says one friend, adding that it was the posters put out by Mortier’s mother, and not any action by police, that led to this sighting. The friend wonders if other sightings may have been reported to police but ignored.

Milutinovich, who lives on Madison’s southwest side, has relied on a network of Amos’ friends to help her create a Web site, pay for posters to be distributed, and search for signs of her son across the country. She walks a fine line between criticizing police and asserting her belief -– her hope -– that Amos is still alive.

"I know they’re working very hard," she says. "I know that whenever I make a complaint to them, they don’t listen to what I’m saying. They think I’m saying, ‘You’re not working hard enough.’ No. I’m just saying they’re going down a path that I don’t think is the right path."

The drug allegations are difficult for Milutinovich to acknowledge, in part because she says she isn’t privy to the details of the investigation.

"To date, I’ve seen no evidence [of drug connections]," she says. "I’ve asked for hard evidence, and they just say, ‘Well, people said this, and that’s strange.’ Well, you know what, I have three nurses that say they ID’ed Amos. That’s tangible stuff. Yeah, I get upset when they start pooh-poohing stuff like that when they’re not giving me anything else."

Milutinovich resents that details of her son’s life have become public. "It’s not like Amos is running for a Senate seat," she says. "Everyone needs privacy, and everyone deserves the dignity of privacy."

Lt. Stetzer empathizes with these frustrations: "I can’t imagine as a parent going through something like this, not trying to look at every single alternative, every single option." He supports Milutinovich "doing anything and everything she can possibly do" to find Amos.

The cops, he says, are doing the same. Two full-time detectives are assigned exclusively to the case, along with support personnel. "Until all efforts are exhausted, we won’t stop looking," Stetzer says. "We have some very positive leads."

Those leads, admittedly, aren’t pointing in the direction of a happy ending. But even Stetzer has not abandoned hope: "There’s nothing we’d love more than to find Amos sitting in a café this afternoon."

An investigation timeline

Nov. 8, 2004: Amos Mortier is last seen on the Madison Area Technical College campus.

Nov. 13: After days without hearing from Mortier, friends show up at his house and find no signs of him or his dog. They later admit to removing marijuana from the house before authorities are called.

Nov. 16: At 12:35 p.m., Mortier’s house is secured as a potential crime scene.

Nov. 17: The first news stories appear about a missing man.

Nov. 20: Detectives find a major marijuana-growing operation at the home of one of Mortier’s friends.

Nov. 23: Nearly a dozen search warrants related to the case are sealed in Dane County Circuit Court.

Dec. 7: A billboard is erected on Beltline with Mortier’s picture and police phone number.

Dec. 17: A fund-raiser for search efforts held at the Inferno, a local club.

Dec. 29: Two men are granted immunity for their testimony at a John Doe hearing.

April 2005: Fitchburg police submit Mortier’s DNA to FBI database, saying he’s "presumed dead" because of the "potential for his involvement in a drug conspiracy."

Apr. 13: Police announce that their investigation leads them to conclude Mortier was likely murdered because of drug involvement.

April 19: Police search the home, office and vehicle of a man one official calls a "prime suspect" in Mortier’s death. No charges ensue.

April 20: Several witnesses testify at a John Doe inquiry.

May 24: Police use cadaver-sniffing dog to search land in Juneau County.

June 10-13: Three nurses report seeing a man who generally fits Mortier’s description at a Tennessee music festival.

How you can help

There is a $10,000 reward for information leading to the whereabouts of Amos Mortier. Contact the Fitchburg Police Department at 270-4300 or 270-4321.

Amos Mortier’s mother asks anyone with information who does not want to talk to police to contact her at 347-7363 or visit www.findamos.com. She also asks that anyone going to music festivals across the country print fliers from the Web site to post.

Offline Denise

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #37 on: February 15, 2009, 11:25:14 AM »
http://www.madison.com/tct/news/stories/438156

Suspect ID'd in Mortier's disappearance but never charged, article says

The Capital Times  —  2/12/2009 8:08 am

Was Amos Mortier murdered and fed to hogs?

A witness told a grand jury in 2006 that's what happened to the Fitchburg man who disappeared in 2004, but police never brought charges against the suspect, according to an article by Nathan Comp in this week's Isthmus newspaper.

Comp reports that a grand jury looking into a marijuana ring heard from a witness who said an associate of Mortier admitted to stabbing Mortier after an argument, then dumped the body on a hog farm, to be consumed by the animals.

Comp also writes that the suspect was interviewed on several occasions by police, but his property was never searched, and he was never asked if he had an alibi. The suspect denied any role in Mortier's disappearance, Comp's article said.

Mortier, 27, disappeared on Nov. 8, 2004, with police believing he was murdered because of his connection to a marijuana sales ring. His body was never found.



Offline Denise

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #38 on: February 15, 2009, 11:26:39 AM »
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/438279

FRI., FEB 13, 2009 - 10:13 AM

No credibility to theory that Mortier eaten by pigs, Fitchburg police say

Could Amos Mortier have been murdered and fed to pigs?

A story published in Thursday's Isthmus, citing federal grand jury testimony related to Mortier's disappearance on Nov. 8, 2004, quotes a Dane County Jail inmate as saying that another man confessed to him that he stabbed Mortier during an argument and fed him to pigs at a farm near Poynette.

But Fitchburg police said they checked out the story long ago and found that it wasn't credible.
 
"We haven't found any credibility to any of the statements," said Lt. Todd Stetzer. "I can say that there was not anything presented in the article that we weren't aware of. Everything's been checked out."

The inmate and the alleged confessor are not named in the Isthmus story.

The grand jury testimony was linked to a marijuana distribution scheme involving Mortier for which three people with Madison ties have been sent to prison. Two other men, Jacob Stadfeld and Brent Delzer, are still awaiting a trial for their alleged roles in the marijuana distribution scheme.

Grand jury testimony is generally secret, but the secrecy ends when transcripts are turned over to defense attorneys after criminal charges are filed, unless a judge has ordered that it remain secret, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Vaudreuil said. No such order exists in this case, he said.

Investigators have long suspected a connection between Mortier's disappearance on Nov. 8, 2004, and an $80,000 debt that Stadfeld owed to Mortier, who was a local distributor of Canadian marijuana that was smuggled into the U.S. and brought to Madison by courier.

Stetzer, whose department did not comment for Isthmus, said the inmate's story was thoroughly checked out, as have all the tips the department has received about Mortier's disappearance. He declined to say what steps were taken.

The pig scenario, however, appears to be somewhat unlikely. Dr. John Howard, president of the National Association of Medical Examiners and co-medical examiner for Spokane County in Washington, said he has heard of only one documented case of pigs being used to dispose of a body. Canadian pig farmer and serial killer Robert Pickton fed some of his victims to his pigs, according to testimony at his trial in 2007.

Animal scavenging is common, Howard said, but it is likely that bone would be left behind unless further broken down.

"It's not that (bodies) completely disappear," he said.

The Isthmus story notes that the inmate, who testified before the grand jury, failed to pass a polygraph test.

But Mortier's mother, Margie Milutinovich, is skeptical that police have investigated the alleged confessor as thoroughly as they have investigated others that they believe to be suspects in the case. She offered Thursday to pay for another polygraph test for the inmate to double-check the results of his first test.

She also wants to know more specifically what police did to investigate the alleged confessor.

"If (police) did check him out thoroughly, bring it forth," she said. "What did they do?"

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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #39 on: June 20, 2009, 01:26:23 PM »
https://www.findthemissing.org/cases/296
NamUs profile for Amos K. Mortier
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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #40 on: November 07, 2009, 10:33:37 AM »
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Re: Assumed Deceased: Amos K. Mortier - WI - 11/08/2004
« Reply #41 on: November 04, 2010, 06:44:15 PM »
http://www.superiortelegram.com/event/article/id/47403/group/homepage/

Prosecutors may try to tie pot plot conspirator to missing man's murder
By: By Ed Treleven, The Wisconsin State Journal, Superior Telegram
Published November 04 2010

Federal prosecutors might try to prove that Jacob Stadfeld was responsible for the murder of Amos Mortier, who disappeared six years ago, when Stadfeld is sentenced, according to a court document filed Wednesday.

Stadfeld, 34, who was convicted in September of taking part in a large-scale marijuana distribution conspiracy that involved Mortier, already faces at least 10 years in prison for his role in the conspiracy.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Graber wrote in the document that the government may try to prove at Stadfeld's sentencing hearing that he is responsible for Mortier's murder, adding it to factors U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb can consider when sentencing Stadfeld on the pot charge.

Proof that he violated the federal homicide statute would not equal a murder conviction but it could set Stadfeld's minimum sentence at 20 years or as much as life, under the advisory federal sentencing guidelines.

Mortier, 27, was last seen at his Fitchburg home on Nov. 8, 2004. Nobody has been charged with his presumed murder.

One Stadfeld attorney, Steven Rueckert, declined to comment Wednesday, while the other, Michael Krejci, did not return calls.

Graber asked that Crabb delay sentencing for Stadfeld until January. The hearing is currently set for Nov. 10.

Graber wrote that U.S. Attorney John Vaudreuil has not yet decided whether to try and show that Stadfeld was responsible for Mortier's murder and will be out of the country this week. He wrote that Stadfeld's attorneys also agree that a decision by Vaudreuil should not be rushed.

Both sides will need more time to prepare for sentencing if Vaudreuil decides to prove Stadfeld's role in Mortier's presumed death, Graber wrote.

Graber said he could not comment. Dane County Assistant District Attorney Corey Stephan, who is assigned the Mortier case for a potential state court prosecution, said he could not discuss an active investigation.

The conspiracy conviction alone carries up to life imprisonment, with a minimum of 10 years behind bars.
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