'You're a killing machine': Judge has no mercy on man convicted of hate-fueled murder of victim who 'checked all the boxes'

Judge hands down life sentence for hate crime murder

Background: Courtroom video of Judge Donald Zuidmulder during Jackson Vogel”s sentencing hearing (WLUK). Inset (left): Jackson Vogel during his murder trial (WBAY). Inset (right): Micah Laureano (Randle-Dable-Brisk Funeral Home).

A Wisconsin man who strangled his cellmate asked a judge to consider supervised release after he was convicted of a hate crime — but the judge was not open to his request.

Jackson Vogel, 25, had already been serving a 20-year prison sentence at Green Bay Correctional Institution for the attempted murder of his mother, a crime he committed when he was 16. Eight years after the beginning of his incarceration, he was assigned a cellmate, 19-year-old Micah Laureano. Laureano had been sentenced to three years for assault and vehicle theft.

According to court records obtained by the Green Bay Press Gazette, Vogel killed Laureano within hours of his arrival.

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Investigators stated that after the murder, Vogel was smiling. According to court records, Vogel said he killed Laureano because he was “bored,” and because he was Black. Vogel also believed Laureano was gay, and he told investigators that his victim “checked all the boxes.”

Vogel was convicted of Laureano’s murder in June following a trial during which he was the only witness presented by his defense. He appeared in court for his sentencing on Friday. The Green Bay Press Gazette was in the courtroom and reported that Vogel’s defense attorney, Luke Harrison, asked Brown County Circuit Court Judge Donald Zuidmulder to consider the possibility that Vogel’s attitude could change.

Harrison said, “I believe that giving Mr. Vogel an opportunity to be released to extended supervision at some time in the future speaks to that possibility that people can change, that change does take an extremely long period of time sometimes, but that it is possible.”

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