During a court hearing on August 10th, 2023, the federal judge overseeing convicted cyberstalker Luke Wenke’s case found Wenke guilty of violating the conditions of his supervised release by indirectly contacting his cyberstalking victim. This occurred in the form of a volatile email that Wenke…
The two transcripts below contain word-for-word accounts of what was said during court hearings that took place on June 21st, 2023 and June 23rd, 2023. Luke Wenke was accused of violating the terms of his federal supervised release by indirectly contacting his cyberstalking victim via…
During the summer of 2023, Luke Wenke was found guilty of violating the conditions of his supervised release by indirectly contacting his cyberstalking victim by emailing the victim’s business partner. He was sentenced to time served and 34 months of continued probation. Shortly thereafter, Wenke’s…
USA v. Luke Wenke – District Court Judgment August 22nd, 2023 CASE #23-6964, DOC. #2 Categories: Luke Wenke, appeals, Court Documents: Judgments Tags: Buffalo, NY; conditions of supervised release, contact ban violations, cyberstalking, indirect contact, probation violations, unwanted contact, U.S. Bureau of Prisons, Victim 1,…
After being found guilty of violating the conditions of his supervised release during the summer of 2023 by indirectly contacting his cyberstalking victim (via the victim’s business partner), Luke Wenke filed an appeal through the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City.…
The following docket reports pertain to two appeals that Luke Wenke filed in his first cyberstalking case (1:22-cr-00035). The first docket report pertains to Wenke’s most recent appeal case (#25-1165), and the docket report below it pertains to his previous appeal case (#23-6964). USA v.…
Luke Wenke sent the following letter to the Honorable John L. Sinatra, Jr. in May of 2024 while detained at the Orleans County Jail in Albion, New York. USA v. Luke Wenke – Letter May 6th, 2024 CASE #1:22-cr-00035, DOC. 132 Katie Mentions: 20 To…
In 2023, Luke Wenke was found guilty of violating the terms of his federal supervised release by indirectly contacting his cyberstalking victim, “Victim 1,” via an email to the victim’s business associate. The PDF viewer below contains two transcripts (Docs. #84 & #85) featuring word-for-word…