FREED: Ghost Riders Gangster Held Woman Down to Be Burned Alive | Tony Evers' Killers & Rapists #21
Since 2019, Gov. Tony Evers' Parole Commission has released hundreds of convicted criminals, freeing them early on parole mostly into Wisconsin communities, including more than 270 murderers and attempted murderers, and more than 44 child rapists.
Scott Howard was one of them. His release was discretionary.
21st in the series.
Catherine Christian suffered a horrific death. She was beaten in the head and then left to die in an arson fire in Rosa's Cantina in the town of Dunn by a Ghost Rider motorcycle gang member who thought she was a "snitch." The paroled killer, Scott "Spotlight" Howard, held her down until she lost consciousness, then left her to die in the Dane County fire.
Christian also angered the Ghost Riders because she was dating a sheriff’s sergeant who had investigated them and was “their nemesis in law enforcement in Dane County,” according to The Wisconsin State Journal in a 1985 article.
A blog on parole issues contains part of a 2013 parole decision denying Howard release at that time. It says that Scott Howard and two co-actors “in a gang-related action” burned down a building “wherein an adult female was killed.”
“Your role was to hold the victim until she lost consciousness. You left her in the building to burn to death," the document says.
Howard admitted he struck the victim in the head stating that the co-actor, who was a national vice president of the Ghost Riders gang, “ordered the burning of the bar (to collect insurance money) and the killing of victim who you claim was a snitch.”
An old newspaper article says “Howard hit Christian over the head so she would be knocked out and die in the fire.”
Howard has a significant criminal record, including a federal case for conspiracy to possess firearms. He had at least three major conduct reports in prison.
“Based on the nature and severity of the case and the brutal taking of a life it is clear that more time is warranted so as not to depreciate the severity of your offending behaviors," that parole decision read. His parole decision was then deferred for another year.
But in 2019, Gov. Tony Evers named a new Parole Commission chairman, John Tate. Tate promptly began releasing some of the most brutal killers in state history, including Howard. Evers reappointed Tate after Howard's release, saying he was pleased to do so.
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