Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Chippewa sheriff likens shootings to Closs case

Man sought relationsh­ip with woman he killed

- Sophie Carson

LAKE HALLIE - A man suspected of killing three of his family members then blasting his way into a Chippewa County home and killing a woman may have been imitating the abduction last year of teenager Jayme Closs.

Sheriff Jim Kowalczyk of Chippewa County said Tuesday that investigat­ors may never know exactly what led to the weekend attacks. He said Ritchie German Jr., 33, killed his mother, brother and nephew and later killed a 24-yearold woman at another home before killing himself.

It’s possible German was trying to kidnap the woman, Laile Vang, as Jake Patterson did with Closs, Kowalczyk said.

German shot Vang in the head Sunday night in Lake Hallie after shooting her parents Teng Vang, 51, and Mai Chang Vang, 39, in the hands, Kowalczyk said.

In tracking the van police say German used to get to the Vangs’ home, officers arrived at the home of German’s mother in Lafayette to find three people dead from gunshots to the head: his mother, Bridget A. German, 66; his brother, Douglas A. German, 32; and Douglas’ son, Calvin B. Harris, 8. Kowalczyk said German’s family members were probably killed Saturday.

German used a shotgun to blast his way into the Vangs’ home, the sheriff said. Authoritie­s also say German left his car running with items inside that suggested similariti­es to the Closs case. They wouldn’t elaborate on those items.

“Why is he going armed to a residence he’s never been to before? To our knowledge it’s similar to the Closs situation,” Kowalczyk said. “I’m not saying that was the motive, but it is just unlikely that some of the same incidents up in Barron County happened in Chippewa County.”

German had sent Vang text messages seeking a personal relationsh­ip, but she texted back saying she didn’t know him, Kowalczyk said.

Family members described Ritchie German as a “troubled individual” and a loner who had no friends, the sheriff said. He lived at his mother’s house in Lafayette off and on since 2004, and he

was unemployed.

His only court case was a 2006 disorderly conduct charge for which he served a year of probation. In that case, German’s mother reported he pointed a gun at his brothers and threatened them.

Ritchie German used his brother Douglas German’s 2016 Kia Sorento minivan to drive to the Vangs’ home, Kowalczyk said. Douglas owned all the guns used in the shooting.

Four other people were inside the Vangs’ home when police say German blasted his way into the home, including three children and one adult. They were hiding as the shooting took place and were not injured, authoritie­s said.

Laile Vang’s parents each needed an arm amputated because of the shooting wounds, Lake Hallie Police Chief Cal Smokowicz said.

Multiple people called 911 when German entered the Vangs’ home, including neighbors, Kowalczyk said.

Investigat­ors found 10 spent shotgun shells at the Vangs’ home, Chief Deputy Chad Holum said.

And at the Lake Hallie home, German’s family members were shot with a handgun, Kowalczyk said.

Bridget German was shot in the bathroom and dragged into another room in the basement, he said. Douglas German and Calvin were shot in the kitchen and wrapped up in sleeping bags and taken to the master bedroom.

“I’m assuming that Ritchie stayed at the residence Friday night and Saturday and, again, used that bedroom to sleep in,” Kowalcyzk said. “That’s just my assumption.”

Ritchie German had excuses for his family’s absence Saturday. Bridget German’s employer at a grocery store had called asking why she didn’t come into work, and he called back saying she’d been hospitaliz­ed. And when neighborho­od kids went to the Lafayette home to ask Calvin to come outside and play, Ritchie German told them Calvin was at the store with his grandmothe­r.

Autopsies were being conducted Tuesday in Ramsey County in Minnesota.

German’s father, Ritchie German Sr., told the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune that he believes his son had bipolar disorder and schizophre­nia. Bridget and Ritchie German Sr. divorced in 2015 and he became estranged from the family. He lives in North Prairie in Waukesha County.

He said his son Douglas worked at SFR Industries, a plastic extrusions company in Cadott, and Ritchie Jr. worked for just one year at a Menards warehouse but was unemployed otherwise.

Jake Patterson also used a shotgun in his assault on Jayme Closs’ home in Barron, about 50 miles from the scene of Sunday’s shootings. He set out to kidnap Jayme after watching her board a school bus one morning. In the early hours of Oct. 15, he approached the family’s home, blasted a shotgun through the front door, killing Jayme’s father, James, then shot and killed her mother, Denise, after she hid with her daughter in a bathtub.

He bound the 13-year-old with black tape, dragged her out of the house and held her captive for 88 days in his home in northern Wisconsin before she escaped.

Patterson, who is now serving a life sentence in a New Mexico prison where he was transferre­d this month, visited the Closs home twice before the kidnapping and murders, and worked meticulous­ly to avoid leaving any trace of evidence. He shaved his head and face to ensure his DNA would not be found at the scene. He also made modifications to the car, disabling the dome light and replacing the rear license plate with a stolen one.

Holum said if abduction was intended in Sunday’s slayings, “it did not work out for him.”

Kowalczyk asked anyone who knows Ritchie German to call (715) 726-4563.

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