Imperial Valley Press

Michigan police shocked by convicted murderer’s release

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DETROIT ( AP) — A Detroit-area man who was convicted of killing his first wife and whose second wife died under suspicious circumstan­ces was granted an early release from prison after he argued that the risk of catching COVID-19 behind bars endangered his life.

Federal prosecutor­s fought to keep Roger Sweet locked up and were surprised by U.S. District Judge Victoria Roberts’ decision Friday. Police said Sweet is considered a “person of interest” in the death of his second wife, whose remains were found in 2013, years after she disappeare­d.

“All along we believed we were looking at the right person here. ... We’re going to assign this to a new staff of detectives to get a fresh set of eyes on the case,” Brownstown Township Chief Je Watson said Tuesday, referring to the death of Lizzie Mae Collier-Sweet.

Roberts ordered Sweet’s release even though he’s received a COVID-19 vaccine dose and survived a virus infection last year. She acknowledg­ed that his crimes were “abhorrent” but said chronic health conditions, especially kidney disease, make him vulnerable.

“Without a single disciplina­ry action in 14 years of incarcerat­ion, Sweet’s behavior demonstrat­es a respect for the law and indicates how he may perform on supervised release,” Roberts said.

In 2008, Sweet was convicted in two Detroit-area courts and federal court. Those crimes included second-degree murder in the 1990 death of his first wife, the sexual assault of a 16-year-old girl and the sexual exploitati­on of children.

His federal prison sentence — 21 years — was the longest and still had seven years remaining, prosecutor­s said.

In 2007, Sweet’s second wife disappeare­d after a fire at their Brownstown Township home, south of Detroit, a blaze that triggered the criminal investigat­ions.

While Sweet was in prison, Collier-Sweet’s remains were found in 2013 in a secluded area less than a mile away from their former home. Her cause of death was listed as “indetermin­ate,” but police believe it was a homicide, Watson said. No one has been charged.

Investigat­ors said Collier-Sweet wrote in a diary that she feared her husband and slept on a couch with a hammer and shotgun, Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Mulcahy said in a court filing, citing news reports.

“Nothing about Sweet’s history and characteri­stics, which include rape, murder and the suspicious circumstan­ces surroundin­g Lizzie Mae’s death, support releasing him early,” Mulcahy said.

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