Katie Krow Kloth was sentenced to serve nine months in Iron County jail before a packed courtroom in Hurley, Wisconsin, and was described by the presiding judge as committing an offense on the low end of the spectrum at a political protest in 2013.
Two sentences of six and three months are ordered to be served consecutively by Ms. Kloth who is eligible for work release and has two weeks to report to jail. “Kloth will have five years of probation with the felony charge and two years with the misdemeanor,” notes the Ashland Daily Press.
The presiding judge, Price County Judge Douglas T. Fox, said a prison sentence was not “appropriate,” and withheld requested prison sentences, rejecting Iron County DA Martin Lipske’s appeals.
Lipske is notoriously corrupt and known for fronting for Gogebic Taconite (GTAC).
GTAC’s $80,000 request for restitution was rejected in full.
A different company employee, Stacy Saari, was ordered to receive a small restitution from Kloth.
Ms. Kloth, a 27-year-old woman who had no criminal record prior, is an environmental and Native American activist who faced four criminal charges for actions at a 2013 political protest at the proposed GTAC mine site in northern Wisconsin. (See Kaufman, New York Times)
Ms. Kloth had pleaded No Contest to two charges last September.
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