Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Friend gets prison for Cudahy man’s fatal overdose

Prosecutor reads drug statistics in hearing

- Bruce Vielmetti

Another sentencing hearing Friday presented another tableau about the collateral damage left by the ongoing epidemic of opioid addiction, that claimed Erick Treu, 34, of Cudahy, one of nearly 300 such victims in Milwaukee County last year.

First, the prosecutor recounted the numbing statistics about overdose deaths — a count projected to rise to 380 this year in Milwaukee County alone.

Then Frederick Treu sat at the microphone. “I found my son’s body,” he said. “It was was really a,” and he paused, choking up, “it’s ah, something I’ll have to live with.”

Melynda Treu, fighting through sobs, described how hard it’s been to raise her younger brother’s 7-yearold son “As much as we love him, we can’t fix the hole in his heart,” she said.

The defendant, Mark A. Glisczinsk­i, 35, gave the judge his piece.

“No words can describe how bad I feel,” he said. “I have no excuses or explanatio­n. I deserve to serve every day this court gives me.”

Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Carolina Stark decided that should be 10 years in prison, plus four more on extended supervisio­n.

Glisczinsk­i pleaded guilty to second-degree reckless homicide by delivery of drugs for selling Treu the mixture of heroin and fentanyl on Jan. 24, 2016, that he injected a short time later at his apartment in Cudahy. When his family finally found him there, he’d been dead about four days.

Stark credited Glisczinsk­i — whom police quickly identified by texts in Treu’s phone — for confessing immediatel­y and cooperatin­g with police.

But she was concerned that, while out on $2,000 bail in Treu’s case over the summer, Glisczinsk­i burglarize­d another acquaintan­ce’s home, stealing electronic­s and three guns he traded to other drug dealers for drugs to feed his own addiction despite having been in treatment for months.

Assistant District Attorney Patricia Daugherty didn’t recommend a specific prison term but argued that Glisczinsk­i’s crime while on bail for homicide showed just how big a risk he is to public safety as long as he’s addicted.

Defense attorney James Rael said his client had no other criminal history, a good work record and started using heroin at a friend’s urging in 2015. After that, he said, Glisczinsk­i became dependent on and exploited by a true drug supplier, Dante Patterson, who had instructed him to cheat Treu on the sale of his final buy.

Patterson, 33, was convicted in June of a fatal shooting in May 2016 and sentenced to 24 years in prison.

Rael suggested four years, plus six more on supervisio­n would be sufficient, noting that decades of prosecutio­n for drugs hasn’t deterred their spread and abuse.

Stark tended to agree that the chance of prison — or death — won’t stop people already selling and using drugs, but said Glisczinsk­i’s prison term just might keep someone from getting involved in the first place.

Glisczinsk­i has also pleaded guilty to the burglary and bail jumping and faces up to 15 more years in prison when he is sentenced in that case Monday.

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Glisczinsk­i
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Treu

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