Yet Another Bulletin Board
Sponsored by: The Fans!


Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register.
Nov 25th, 2024, 7:59pm

Upcoming Premiere Dates:
Survivor 23, Season premiere
Thursday, September 14 (8:00-9:30 PM, ET/PT) on CBS




Home Home Help Help Search Search Members Members Chat Chat Member Map Member Map Login Login Register Register

| Fantasy Survivor Game | Music Forums | The '80s Server Forums | Shop Online |



Metropolis Reality Forums « Father, Son Among Wisconson Hunters Mourned »

   Metropolis Reality Forums
   Off-Topic Forums
   In the News
(Moderators: lakelady, yesteach, MediaScribe, Bumper, Isle_be_back)
   Father, Son Among Wisconson Hunters Mourned
Previous topic | New Topic | Next topic »
Pages: 1  Reply Reply Add Poll Add Poll Notify of replies Notify of replies Send Topic Send Topic Print Print
   Author  Topic: Father, Son Among Wisconson Hunters Mourned  (Read 233 times)
luci
ForumsNet Member
USA 
*****






   
View Profile

Gender: female
Posts: 12045
Father, Son Among Wisconson Hunters Mourned
« on: Nov 29th, 2004, 10:13am »
Quote Quote Modify Modify

 
RICE LAKE, Wis. - Robert Crotteau and his son Joseph, who worked together and spent much of their free time enjoying the outdoors together, were mourned together Saturday, days after both were killed in a confrontation with a hunter trespassing on their land.
 
"To say they were two peas in a pod is an understatement, without question," Steve Crotteau, Robert's younger brother, said during the funeral at St. Joseph's Catholic Church.
 
Robert Crotteau, 42, and his 20-year-old son were among six hunters killed and two wounded in a bloody confrontation that shocked neighbors in Rice Lake, a northwestern Wisconsin town of 8,500 people. The funeral for another victim, Allan Laski, was held later Saturday.
 
The man accused in the shootings, Chai Vang, 36, of St. Paul, Minn., remained in the Sawyer County Jail in lieu of $2.5 million bail Saturday awaiting formal charges.
 
Robert and Joseph Crotteau worked at a concrete and construction business in Haugen that the elder Crotteau owned.
 
Alex Drost, a friend of Joseph Crotteau, reminisced Saturday about the time he and other friends spent hunting and snowmobiling.
 
"We are going to miss Joe's smile, his laugh, every comment he had to make," Drost said during the funeral.
 
The Rev. David Oberts, who officiated at both the Crotteaus' and Laski's funerals, urged mourners to take comfort in one another and in their faith in God.
 
"We're drawn together by this really tragic, unexplainable event," he said during the service for Laski at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Haugen.
 
Like the Crotteaus, Laski, 43, loved the outdoors, especially fishing and hunting, and even traveled out West to hunt elk. The father of three was the manager of United Building Center in Rice Lake.
 
Mourners crammed into the pews and packed the choir loft at Holy Trinity for Laski's funeral.
 
Laski's sister, Linda Levan, read a poem entitled "Miss Me, But Let Me Go": "Miss me a little, but not for too long, and not with your head bowed low."
 
Some mourners attended both funerals Saturday, including the two men injured in the shootings, Terry Willers and Lauren Hesebeck.
 
Vang, a Hmong immigrant, told authorities the hunters surrounded him and used racial slurs before one fired a shot at him. One of the survivors said Vang fired the first shot.
 
The deer hunting season ends Sunday night.
IP Logged

"A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart and
can sing it back to you when you have forgotten the words."
Back to top
Pages: 1  Reply Reply Add Poll Add Poll Notify of replies Notify of replies Send Topic Send Topic Print Print

Previous topic | New Topic | Next topic »

Metropolis Reality Forums » Powered by YaBB 1 Gold - SP 1.3.1!
YaBB © 2000-2003. All Rights Reserved.