News (Media Awareness Project) - US WI: If You're on Drugs, Prosecutor Todd Bjerke Is on Your Case |
Title: | US WI: If You're on Drugs, Prosecutor Todd Bjerke Is on Your Case |
Published On: | 2006-08-21 |
Source: | La Crosse Tribune (WI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 05:12:24 |
IF YOU'RE ON DRUGS, PROSECUTOR TODD BJERKE IS ON YOUR CASE
Todd Bjerke enters the courtroom every day for two reasons: to protect
the community and save drug addicts from their deathbeds.
"I get calls from people every now and then that say I turned their
life around," said the La Crosse County Assistant District Attorney.
Bjerke has prosecuted thousands of drug-related cases in his 17 years
with the county and carries the heaviest case load in the state, he
said.
His office inside the courthouse is stacked with cardboard boxes of
case files and his desk is littered with criminal complaints. The
Wisconsin Circuit Court Access Web site is his Internet homepage. A
22-by-16-inch color photograph of a 2.2-pound cocaine brick hangs on
the opposite wall from his wood-framed law degrees. Ask Bjerke about
any defendant he's prosecuted and he can recall his or her criminal
history and drug ties without hesitation.
"He is known throughout the state for his expertise on gangs and
drugs," said Ken Peters, a drug agent with the state Division of
Criminal Investigation. "He is a man of integrity and high standard."
Peters is just one of the many state and local drug investigators, law
enforcement members and attorneys who call on Bjerke for his knowledge
and legal advice.
"It's because of the sheer volume of drug cases I've handled. I've
handled just about everything," Bjerke said.
And in those cases are thousands of defendants. Some are incarcerated.
Some are dead. Still others, Bjerke said, are alive - and sober -
because he fought for the treatment they needed.
That's something some defendants never forgot. Some make it a point to
tell him, he said.
"I get stopped on the street and people thank me for helping them,"
Bjerke said.
The Path to Prosecution
Bjerke, who said he's in his late 40s - "my age is the only thing you
don't get to know" - hails from Waukesha, Wis.
After high school, Bjerke went on to receive an A.S. degree in
business from University of Wisconsin Center- Waukesha in 1977 and a
B.A. in political science and psychology from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in 1979.
"I would have had three majors, but I couldn't stand economics," he
said.
In 1984, Bjerke earned his law degree from Hamline University School
of Law in St. Paul, Minn., and entered the military as a defense attorney.
"I'm sitting there studying for my finals, and I get a letter from the
(U.S.) Marine Corps," he said. "On June 12, I went down, saw the
recruiter and signed up."
Bjerke spent three years active duty at the Marine Corps base in
Quantico, Va., as defense counsel until he was hired as the Assistant
County Attorney in Redwood County, Minn., and an associate attorney at
a law firm in Redwood Falls, Minn.
In 1989, Bjerke joined the U.S. Army Reserve, where he practiced in
various areas of law.
In the same year, Bjerke applied for the Assistant District Attorney
position in La Crosse County. District Attorney Scott Horne hired him
two days later.
"I wanted to be an FBI agent back when I was in fifth grade," Bjerke
said. "In sixth grade, I decided to be an FBI agent, I was going to be
a lawyer first, but in the meantime I decided I could do more good as
a prosecutor than as a FBI agent and steered my way toward what I do."
Drug Prosecutor
Bjerke prosecuted traffic and juvenile cases until Horne gave him his
first drug case in 1992. He's handled almost all the county's drug
cases ever since.
"Not only can I have an effect on the people that use and abuse the
drugs, and hopefully have an effect that's positive and gets them to
want to be sober, but also I can identify the people that are the main
for-profit dealers and get them off our streets," he said.
His multiple defendant drug cases contribute to his heavy case
load.
"There's so much drugs in the area, and there's so much related to
drugs," Bjerke said. "I get complex cases where there might be three,
four or up to 30 people involved in one case."
Local and state drug investigators rattle off adjectives to describe
Bjerke - fair, dedicated, intelligent, driven - but far above the rest
is hard-working.
And available. Local law enforcement members said they can call Bjerke
at 3 p.m. or 3 a.m., and he never hesitates to help.
"He's always willing to go the extra mile for us to put together a
case," said La Crosse County Sheriff's Department Investigator Fritz
Leinfelder.
Some call Bjerke a workaholic, as he's often found working early and
late and is known to begin compiling criminal complaints on scene.
That dedication, Peters said, is valuable to the community.
"He is such an asset to western Wisconsin," he said. "He is the Eliot
Ness of La Crosse County."
A Passion to Help
Bjerke said prosecuting defendants isn't just about aiming for
incarceration, but also getting them the proper drug treatment.
"I think the bottom line is, you want to hold people accountable, and
you want to try to change their behaviors," he said. "My whole
professional career I've tried to make positive changes in people's
lives."
Bjerke helped implement the county's drug court and has served as the
representative prosecutor since the court's establishment in January
2002.
"If (defendants) get accepted (into drug court), I try to fashion some
sort of disposition that's weighed in such a way that if they complete
drug court, they'll be in a better position because they have the
tools to be sober now," he said.
Bjerke has aspirations to take his legal expertise to a higher level
and is applying for legal positions with the U.S. Army Reserve that
will pull him from La Crosse one weekend a month.
Outside the Courtroom
When he's not in the courtroom, Bjerke travels, enjoys astronomy,
spends time outdoors and works on home improvements.
He also lends his knowledge about drugs and gangs to various community
groups.
"The thing about it is, most people in the community, even the
well-read ones, really don't understand the depths of issues we have
with crime in the community," he said. "They don't realize there's
this underworld of activity."
[sidebar]
THE TODD BJERKE FILE
Military
U.S. Army Rescue, colonel (1989 to present); practicing in various
areas of law
U.S. Marine Corps; captain at discharge (1984 to 1987); defense
counsel
Legal Experience
La Crosse County assistant district attorney (1989 to
present)
Assistant county attorney, Redwood County, Minn. (1987 to
1989)
Associate attorney in Redwood Falls, Minn. (1987 to
1989)
Boards and Membership
Founding member of the La Crosse County Drug Court
Legal advisor for the West Central Metropolitan Enforcement
Group
Board member for the Asian Gang Investigators Association
Member and trainer for the Wisconsin Narcotics Officers
Association
Member of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals
Board member of the Wisconsin Association of Treatment Court
Professionals
Family
Wife, Karen Kroll, son, Benjamin, and daughters, Emily and
Amanda
Todd Bjerke enters the courtroom every day for two reasons: to protect
the community and save drug addicts from their deathbeds.
"I get calls from people every now and then that say I turned their
life around," said the La Crosse County Assistant District Attorney.
Bjerke has prosecuted thousands of drug-related cases in his 17 years
with the county and carries the heaviest case load in the state, he
said.
His office inside the courthouse is stacked with cardboard boxes of
case files and his desk is littered with criminal complaints. The
Wisconsin Circuit Court Access Web site is his Internet homepage. A
22-by-16-inch color photograph of a 2.2-pound cocaine brick hangs on
the opposite wall from his wood-framed law degrees. Ask Bjerke about
any defendant he's prosecuted and he can recall his or her criminal
history and drug ties without hesitation.
"He is known throughout the state for his expertise on gangs and
drugs," said Ken Peters, a drug agent with the state Division of
Criminal Investigation. "He is a man of integrity and high standard."
Peters is just one of the many state and local drug investigators, law
enforcement members and attorneys who call on Bjerke for his knowledge
and legal advice.
"It's because of the sheer volume of drug cases I've handled. I've
handled just about everything," Bjerke said.
And in those cases are thousands of defendants. Some are incarcerated.
Some are dead. Still others, Bjerke said, are alive - and sober -
because he fought for the treatment they needed.
That's something some defendants never forgot. Some make it a point to
tell him, he said.
"I get stopped on the street and people thank me for helping them,"
Bjerke said.
The Path to Prosecution
Bjerke, who said he's in his late 40s - "my age is the only thing you
don't get to know" - hails from Waukesha, Wis.
After high school, Bjerke went on to receive an A.S. degree in
business from University of Wisconsin Center- Waukesha in 1977 and a
B.A. in political science and psychology from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in 1979.
"I would have had three majors, but I couldn't stand economics," he
said.
In 1984, Bjerke earned his law degree from Hamline University School
of Law in St. Paul, Minn., and entered the military as a defense attorney.
"I'm sitting there studying for my finals, and I get a letter from the
(U.S.) Marine Corps," he said. "On June 12, I went down, saw the
recruiter and signed up."
Bjerke spent three years active duty at the Marine Corps base in
Quantico, Va., as defense counsel until he was hired as the Assistant
County Attorney in Redwood County, Minn., and an associate attorney at
a law firm in Redwood Falls, Minn.
In 1989, Bjerke joined the U.S. Army Reserve, where he practiced in
various areas of law.
In the same year, Bjerke applied for the Assistant District Attorney
position in La Crosse County. District Attorney Scott Horne hired him
two days later.
"I wanted to be an FBI agent back when I was in fifth grade," Bjerke
said. "In sixth grade, I decided to be an FBI agent, I was going to be
a lawyer first, but in the meantime I decided I could do more good as
a prosecutor than as a FBI agent and steered my way toward what I do."
Drug Prosecutor
Bjerke prosecuted traffic and juvenile cases until Horne gave him his
first drug case in 1992. He's handled almost all the county's drug
cases ever since.
"Not only can I have an effect on the people that use and abuse the
drugs, and hopefully have an effect that's positive and gets them to
want to be sober, but also I can identify the people that are the main
for-profit dealers and get them off our streets," he said.
His multiple defendant drug cases contribute to his heavy case
load.
"There's so much drugs in the area, and there's so much related to
drugs," Bjerke said. "I get complex cases where there might be three,
four or up to 30 people involved in one case."
Local and state drug investigators rattle off adjectives to describe
Bjerke - fair, dedicated, intelligent, driven - but far above the rest
is hard-working.
And available. Local law enforcement members said they can call Bjerke
at 3 p.m. or 3 a.m., and he never hesitates to help.
"He's always willing to go the extra mile for us to put together a
case," said La Crosse County Sheriff's Department Investigator Fritz
Leinfelder.
Some call Bjerke a workaholic, as he's often found working early and
late and is known to begin compiling criminal complaints on scene.
That dedication, Peters said, is valuable to the community.
"He is such an asset to western Wisconsin," he said. "He is the Eliot
Ness of La Crosse County."
A Passion to Help
Bjerke said prosecuting defendants isn't just about aiming for
incarceration, but also getting them the proper drug treatment.
"I think the bottom line is, you want to hold people accountable, and
you want to try to change their behaviors," he said. "My whole
professional career I've tried to make positive changes in people's
lives."
Bjerke helped implement the county's drug court and has served as the
representative prosecutor since the court's establishment in January
2002.
"If (defendants) get accepted (into drug court), I try to fashion some
sort of disposition that's weighed in such a way that if they complete
drug court, they'll be in a better position because they have the
tools to be sober now," he said.
Bjerke has aspirations to take his legal expertise to a higher level
and is applying for legal positions with the U.S. Army Reserve that
will pull him from La Crosse one weekend a month.
Outside the Courtroom
When he's not in the courtroom, Bjerke travels, enjoys astronomy,
spends time outdoors and works on home improvements.
He also lends his knowledge about drugs and gangs to various community
groups.
"The thing about it is, most people in the community, even the
well-read ones, really don't understand the depths of issues we have
with crime in the community," he said. "They don't realize there's
this underworld of activity."
[sidebar]
THE TODD BJERKE FILE
Military
U.S. Army Rescue, colonel (1989 to present); practicing in various
areas of law
U.S. Marine Corps; captain at discharge (1984 to 1987); defense
counsel
Legal Experience
La Crosse County assistant district attorney (1989 to
present)
Assistant county attorney, Redwood County, Minn. (1987 to
1989)
Associate attorney in Redwood Falls, Minn. (1987 to
1989)
Boards and Membership
Founding member of the La Crosse County Drug Court
Legal advisor for the West Central Metropolitan Enforcement
Group
Board member for the Asian Gang Investigators Association
Member and trainer for the Wisconsin Narcotics Officers
Association
Member of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals
Board member of the Wisconsin Association of Treatment Court
Professionals
Family
Wife, Karen Kroll, son, Benjamin, and daughters, Emily and
Amanda
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