bloodrayne
04-27-2005, 12:57 PM
Man Says He Kept Mom In Freezer To Collect Her Checks
He Was Afraid People Would Think He Killed Her
La Crosse, Wisconsin -- A man who told police during a standoff that his dead mother was in his basement freezer said he lived on her Social Security checks since she died almost five years ago, but he knew the aid could soon run out, court documents show.
Philip Schuth told investigators he didn't expect the money to last more than five years, and he was thinking about killing himself with a "12-gauge lobotomy" or committing armed robbery so he would go to jail, according to the documents filed Monday in La Crosse County Circuit Court.
Schuth now is accused of shooting a neighbor during a dispute Friday that led to an overnight standoff, during which he told police he had explosives but also disclosed where his mother's body could be found. After his surrender early Saturday, investigators found the chest-type freezer and chipped away at the ice until they found human remains.
Schuth, 52, told police his elderly mother, Edith, died of natural causes in August 2000, but he didn't tell anyone because he was afraid police would blame him, the documents showed.
Years earlier his mother was attacked by a cat, resulting in her blood landing on the walls of their house, and he was worried he'd be charged with murder, according to the documents. He told investigators he had no other means of income than his mother's Social Security checks.
Circuit Judge Ramona Gonzalez set Schuth's bail at $100,000 Monday, and the district attorney said he expected to charge Schuth next week.
Schuth said almost nothing in court, except to pronounce his last name as "shoof." He rocked in his chair as he waited to face the judge.
Investigators found the freezer at the end of a nearly 15-hour standoff at Schuth's home in the Town of Campbell, located on French Island in the Mississippi River about 110 miles northwest of Madison.
The standoff began when 10-year-old Josh Russell told his father, Randy, that Schuth hit him in Schuth's yard. Randy Russell, his wife, Melissa, and Josh Russell confronted Schuth, who admitted he hit the boy, then pulled out a handgun and opened fire from about eight yards away, according to the court documents. Randy Russell was hit three times before the family fled and called police. He was treated and released at a La Crosse hospital.
Schuth retreated into his house. Three SWAT teams arrived, and Schuth told negotiators he had "more than 10 but less than 100" bombs in the house and 16 firearms, and it would be "high noon" when he surrendered, according to the court documents.
"We were all in danger," said La Crosse County Sheriff's Capt. Jeff Wolf, who led the SWAT teams.
He said Schuth watched the standoff on TV news while talking with officers, who eventually talked him into surrendering Saturday.
Wolf declined to detail how they calmed down Schuth, saying only that Schuth told them he has no family and "almost appeared happy he had someone to talk to."
Schuth said his mother was from England and his father, an American, had fought in one of the world wars. Schuth told police he was born in Germany and held only part-time jobs. He graduated from a La Crosse high school and lived most of his life on French Island, but investigators had little more information on him, Wolf said.
Schuth was known around French Island for walking around in a coat and wader-style rubber boots, even in warm weather.
"I know of him and I saw him and I knew where he lived. He walked the streets, the sidewalks of the Town of Campbell all the time," said state Sen. Dan Kapanke, a Republican who lives three blocks from Schuth.
Investigators found 15 to 20 homemade explosive devices, packed with nails, heavy staples and other metal items in the house. Schuth referred to the devices as "anti-personnel," court documents said. They also found a sawed-off shotgun along with 15 other firearms.
In the freezer, police found a block of ice. They chipped away at it and uncovered a human knee.
The ice block was taken to Hastings, Minn., where investigators were still working to chip it apart Monday. Wolf said a body appears to be in the block, intact in a sitting position.
An autopsy is expected to be completed late this week.
Court documents said investigators found $10,000 in cash in the house and checks for a joint account Schuth held with his mother, containing about $25,000.
Schuth told investigators his mother's Social Security checks are deposited electronically in that account. He once switched the account to a different bank after an employee questioned whether his mother was still alive, Schuth told authorities.
County land records showed the home is valued at $56,200, and ownership remains in the name of Edith Schuth.
District Attorney Scott Horne said he plans to charge Schuth next week with attempted homicide and reckless endangerment for allegedly shooting at the Russell family, as well as having improvised explosives, concealing a corpse and possessing a short-barrelled shotgun.
He Was Afraid People Would Think He Killed Her
La Crosse, Wisconsin -- A man who told police during a standoff that his dead mother was in his basement freezer said he lived on her Social Security checks since she died almost five years ago, but he knew the aid could soon run out, court documents show.
Philip Schuth told investigators he didn't expect the money to last more than five years, and he was thinking about killing himself with a "12-gauge lobotomy" or committing armed robbery so he would go to jail, according to the documents filed Monday in La Crosse County Circuit Court.
Schuth now is accused of shooting a neighbor during a dispute Friday that led to an overnight standoff, during which he told police he had explosives but also disclosed where his mother's body could be found. After his surrender early Saturday, investigators found the chest-type freezer and chipped away at the ice until they found human remains.
Schuth, 52, told police his elderly mother, Edith, died of natural causes in August 2000, but he didn't tell anyone because he was afraid police would blame him, the documents showed.
Years earlier his mother was attacked by a cat, resulting in her blood landing on the walls of their house, and he was worried he'd be charged with murder, according to the documents. He told investigators he had no other means of income than his mother's Social Security checks.
Circuit Judge Ramona Gonzalez set Schuth's bail at $100,000 Monday, and the district attorney said he expected to charge Schuth next week.
Schuth said almost nothing in court, except to pronounce his last name as "shoof." He rocked in his chair as he waited to face the judge.
Investigators found the freezer at the end of a nearly 15-hour standoff at Schuth's home in the Town of Campbell, located on French Island in the Mississippi River about 110 miles northwest of Madison.
The standoff began when 10-year-old Josh Russell told his father, Randy, that Schuth hit him in Schuth's yard. Randy Russell, his wife, Melissa, and Josh Russell confronted Schuth, who admitted he hit the boy, then pulled out a handgun and opened fire from about eight yards away, according to the court documents. Randy Russell was hit three times before the family fled and called police. He was treated and released at a La Crosse hospital.
Schuth retreated into his house. Three SWAT teams arrived, and Schuth told negotiators he had "more than 10 but less than 100" bombs in the house and 16 firearms, and it would be "high noon" when he surrendered, according to the court documents.
"We were all in danger," said La Crosse County Sheriff's Capt. Jeff Wolf, who led the SWAT teams.
He said Schuth watched the standoff on TV news while talking with officers, who eventually talked him into surrendering Saturday.
Wolf declined to detail how they calmed down Schuth, saying only that Schuth told them he has no family and "almost appeared happy he had someone to talk to."
Schuth said his mother was from England and his father, an American, had fought in one of the world wars. Schuth told police he was born in Germany and held only part-time jobs. He graduated from a La Crosse high school and lived most of his life on French Island, but investigators had little more information on him, Wolf said.
Schuth was known around French Island for walking around in a coat and wader-style rubber boots, even in warm weather.
"I know of him and I saw him and I knew where he lived. He walked the streets, the sidewalks of the Town of Campbell all the time," said state Sen. Dan Kapanke, a Republican who lives three blocks from Schuth.
Investigators found 15 to 20 homemade explosive devices, packed with nails, heavy staples and other metal items in the house. Schuth referred to the devices as "anti-personnel," court documents said. They also found a sawed-off shotgun along with 15 other firearms.
In the freezer, police found a block of ice. They chipped away at it and uncovered a human knee.
The ice block was taken to Hastings, Minn., where investigators were still working to chip it apart Monday. Wolf said a body appears to be in the block, intact in a sitting position.
An autopsy is expected to be completed late this week.
Court documents said investigators found $10,000 in cash in the house and checks for a joint account Schuth held with his mother, containing about $25,000.
Schuth told investigators his mother's Social Security checks are deposited electronically in that account. He once switched the account to a different bank after an employee questioned whether his mother was still alive, Schuth told authorities.
County land records showed the home is valued at $56,200, and ownership remains in the name of Edith Schuth.
District Attorney Scott Horne said he plans to charge Schuth next week with attempted homicide and reckless endangerment for allegedly shooting at the Russell family, as well as having improvised explosives, concealing a corpse and possessing a short-barrelled shotgun.