Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hunkered down

Wanted on child sexual assault, porn charges

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State fugitive survives three years in makeshift bunker, to stand trial for child sexual assault, porn charges.

RINGLE – A Wisconsin fugitive wanted on child sexual assault and child pornograph­y charges hid out for more than three years in a makeshift bunker powered by solar panels and a pedal generator before a hunter stumbled onto him last week, police said.

WSAW-TV in Wausau said that several months ago, Thomas Nelson of Wausau found a bunker with a log door carved into an embankment on state land in the township of Ringle west of Wausau. He became curious and returned to the bunker on the moring of Aug. 9 to see what was inside.

The door was unlatched so he went inside. He discovered Jeremiah Button, 44, who disappeare­d in February 2016 just weeks before he was scheduled to stand trial on child sexual assault and child pornograph­y charges.

“I pushed the door open, and I look inside and I can see canned foods, there’s little storage boxes, and I’m like … I gotta go in,” Nelson told the station. “I come around the corner a bit and there he is, laying in his bed. I mean, I was shaking when I went in; I was shaking when I went out.”

He moved away and called police, guiding them to the bunker’s door. A 20-minute standoff ensued before Button surrendere­d. Marathon County Sheriff’s Deputy Matt Kecker said Button seemed almost glad for human interactio­n.

Kecker said Button told deputies that he had been building the bunker while his case was moving through court, stockpilin­g it with items he found in the Marathon County landfill.

Sheriff’s Lt. Jeff Stefonek said Button set up solar panels on the bunker’s roof to power LED lights, radios, cooling fans and all manner of electronic equipment.

He also had a pedal-powered generator for cloudy days. The bunker was small enough that it stayed warm in winter and cool in summer.

“He was not only surviving, but thriving in this structure through all of the different supplies he was able to find,” Stefonek said.

Button is in custody on a $100,000 cash bond and is due back in court for a pre-trial conference Sept. 16.

His attorneys, public defenders Anne Renc and Jessica Phelps, didn’t immediatel­y return phone messages Wednesday. Court records show they were assigned to Button’s case Tuesday.

His attorney in 2016, Gary Kryshak, withdrew from the case in February 2017, a year after Button fled. He didn’t immediatel­y return a message left at his office Wednesday.

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