Nonstopdrivel
13 years ago

Adultery as a Crime: Old Laws Dusted Off In a Wisconsin Case 
By WILLIAM E. SCHMIDT, Special to The New York Times
Published: April 30, 1990

A 28-year-old woman will be arraigned next month in northern Wisconsin, where she is to stand trial on one of the rarest of criminal accusations: adultery.

No one in Wisconsin can recall the last time a county prosecutor sought to enforce the state's 19th-century law that requires sexual fidelity inside marriage. A felony punishable by up to two years in the state penitentiary and a fine of $10,000, adultery has not been an issue in Wisconsin courts since the early part of the century, lawyers say.

But the state's case against Donna E. Carroll has focused new attention on these relatively obscure statutes, which endure - although they are seldom, if ever, enforced - in the criminal codes of about half the states, including New York, Connecticut and Illinois.

Just as a much older story about adultery, Nathaniel Hawthorne's ''The Scarlet Letter,'' served as a morality tale of Puritanism and 17th-century New England, the state's decision to prosecute Mrs. Carroll has unfolded as a tale of contemporary morals and manners in northern Wisconsin.

Her lawyers, including counsel from the American Civil Liberties Union, argue that the law under which Mrs. Carroll is being prosecuted should be declared unconstitutional. The A.C.L.U., in particular, has cast her as the unfortunate victim of a district attorney who has allowed himself to become an instrument of vengeance in the hands of an angry husband.

The state, for its part, argues that it is representing the public good by pressing charges against Mrs. Carroll, because Wisconsin has a substantial interest in preventing adultery to support ''the stability and best interests of marriage and the family.'' And the local prosecutor said he had no choice but to enforce a law when confronted with evidence of a violation.

Ronald J. Allen, a professor at Northwestern University School of Law here, says that adultery statutues, like those banning fornication and sodomy, are seldom used but have remained on the books in many states because they are so closely tied to larger notions about public morality.

Mr. Allen said such laws have even inspired an aphorism among lawyers: ''They are on the books to help preserve our morality,'' he said, ''at the same time they are not enforced in order to preserve our conduct.''

Husband's Role Is Cited

Through her lawyers, Mrs. Carroll has denied committing adultery. In briefs filed on her behalf, lawyers have argued that the adultery statute violates Mrs. Carroll's right to privacy, equal protection, due process and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment. They also have questioned the fairness of prosecuting her because her husband at the time, Robert J. Carroll, admitted to his own extramarital affair but was not charged. A special prosecutor assigned to examine his case concluded there was insufficient evidence to bring charges, since the offense probably occurred outside Wisconsin while Mr. Carroll, a trucker, was on the road.

In an interview, District Attorney Robert E. Eaton defended his decision to bring charges against Mrs. Carroll. ''The law is on the books,'' he said. ''There was strong evidence presented to me of a violation. For me to decide not to prosecute would be, in effect, to declare the statute null and void. And that is not my role as district attorney.''

Under the Wisconsin law, a married person who has sexual intercourse with someone other than his or her spouse, or a person who has sexual intercourse with someone married to another, is guilty of adultery.

Custody Battle Over Son

Mrs. Carroll's case began last summer in Ashland, a town of 9,500 on the Lake Superior shore, in far northern Wisconsin, while the couple was going through a fractious divorce and custody battle over their 7-year-old son.

According to Mr. Eaton, Mr. Carroll came to his office and, with his father, swore out a criminal complaint accusing his wife of adultery, in violation of the state law.

The complaint was based mainly on an admission that they said Mrs. Carroll, a homemaker, made during a civil divorce hearing several months earlier, in March 1989. The hearing took place shortly after Mr. Carroll had filed for divorce after nine years of marriage.

According to the complaint, Mrs. Carroll told a Family Court hearing that she and another man had a sexual encounter inside the two-story frame home that she shared at the time with her son and husband, who was out of town on a long-haul truck trip.

Other Man Is Identified

The other man was identified in the court documents as Sherman Stenner, whom Mr. Carroll later described as an out-of-work truck driver he had befriended at least two years before. At a hearing, Mr. Carroll said he met Mr. Stenner at a truck stop in Madison, bought him a meal and lent him some money to help him get back on his feet.

Shortly after the sexual encounter at the Carroll house, the complaint states, Mrs. Carroll moved out and began living with Mr. Stenner.

Although Mr. Stenner is also liable to prosecution, under the statute, he was not charged, said Mr. Eaton, because there was no evidence implicating him in a crime beyond Mrs. Carroll's alleged admission. Mr. Eaton explained that Mrs. Carroll's Family Court testimony is sufficient to incriminate herself but not, under rules against heresay, to implicate Mr. Stenner.

Jay S. Moynihan, who is Mrs. Carroll's lawyer, says Mrs. Carroll denies she ever made an admission of an extramarital affair. She will plead not guilty and demand a jury trial, he said. Earlier this year, the court granted the Carrolls a divorce and awarded custody of their son to Mrs. Carroll, who now lives in Janesville, in southern Wisconsin.

On the Front Pages

''It is hard to believe the case could get this far,'' said Mr. Moynihan, who said he recalled the morning last summer when Mrs. Carroll's arrest was on the front pages of Wisconsin newspapers. ''I remember having this picture of people all across the state, sitting across the breakfast table from the their spouses, opening the newspaper and suddenly spilling coffee all over themselves.''

Among other things, Mr. Moynihan and Margaret J. Vergeront, a volunteer lawyer in Madison for the A.C.L.U., have argued that it is inconsistent for adultery to remain on the books as a criminal matter when the State Legislature has eliminated adultery as grounds for divorce.

''If there is a chance for a marriage to survive adultery - as surely many do - one can be certain that criminal prosecution, or even the threat of it, will destroy rather than enhance that chance,'' wrote Ms. Vergeront in her brief.

Sanctions against adultery are as old as the Bible. Adultery is expressly forbidden by the Sixth Commandment, and Old Testament scriptures called death the appropriate punishment. In colonial New England, punishment could also include public humiliation, as Hawthrone so poignantly described in ''The Scarlet Letter.''

Not a Great Deterrent

The heroine of his novel, Hester Prynne, was required to wear the letter ''A'' embroidered on her bosom as a mark of shame for bearing the child of a man who was not her husband.

Even so, there is little reason to believe that criminal sanctions now serve as much of a deterrence. Although there is broad disagreement among scholars as to its incidence, given the reluctance of people to discuss such behavior, some studies estimate that 30 to 70 percent of married people have engaged in extramarital sex.

The current array of criminal sanctions against adultery make up a bewildering patchwork of state law. According to an article in the Harvard Law Review, 27 states had statutes prohibiting adultery in 1987.

In Massachusetts and Michigan, like Wisconsin, adultery is a felony. In Michigan, it is punishable by up to four years in prison, and in Massachusetts by three years.

In contrast, adultery is a misdemeanor in Maryland, punishable by a $10 fine. Tom Smith, a lawyer with the American Bar Association, says some lawmakers in the state have suggested facetiously that Maryland would be better off if it enforced the law more vigorously, raised the fine to $1,000 - and repealed the state income tax.

A 1944 Case in New York

In New York, like Connecticut, adultery is also a misdemeanor, punishable by up to 90 days in jail and a fine of $100. According to McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York, the last time anyone was prosecuted in New York for adultery was 1944.

Of the 23 states in which adultery is not on the books, at least three, Louisiana, New Mexico and Tennessee, have never punished it as a crime. Several others, including New Jersy, have abolished the statute as part of a general reform of their penal codes.

The constitional debate about the adultery statutes revolves around the issue of the right to sexual privacy among consenting adults. Although the United States Supreme Court, in a decision involving a Georgia sodomy case, recently refused to extend such a right of privacy to homosexuals, the Federal courts have generally ruled that private sexual conduct among heterosexuals is protected from state prescription.

What is still at issue, say civil libertarians, is whether that right of privacy also extends to a couple that includes at least one person married to someone else. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court did uphold the statute, in a 1983 case of a woman who was arrested and charged with adultery after two vice officers in suburban Boston saw her flag down a van, get inside and have sexual intercourse with a man. Tactic Used by the Police? In Boston, according to a brief filed in the case, the police often would use the law against adultery, a felony, as a means of placing heavier penalties on prostitution.

In upholding the woman's adultery conviction, the court acknowledged that the statutes are rarely prosecuted, but it added, ''If any lack of prosecution of the crime of adultery indicates a general public disfavor with the statute, approriate means exist to address such disfavor in the Legislature, which has the power to change or repeal the statute.''

But over the years, when given the opportunity to repeal or abolish adultery statutues, legislatures in Wisconsin, New York and Maryland, among others, have refused to abolish the laws.

After Mrs. Carroll was charged with adultery, State Representative Scott C. Fergus, a Democrat from Racine, proposed a bill that would have decriminalized adultery in Wisconsin.

''I believe this is an area in which the state simply does not belong,'' said Mr. Fergus. But he said he never introduced the bill, after talking to a number of colleagues. ''Most of them told me they were very fearful of putting their name on it,'' he said.

Mr. Fergus said constituents flooded his office with letters condemning the bill as anti-family and immoral. ''Anyone who approaches this issue must approach it with extreme caution,'' he said, ''because it can border on political suicide.''

Correction: May 3, 1990, Thursday, Late Edition - Final An article on Monday about an adultery prosecution in Wisconsin misattributed a listing of states in which adultery was still prohibited by law in 1987. It was in The Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, not The Harvard Law Review. Also on Monday, an article about a study issued by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching misidentified the study. It is titled ''Campus Life: In Search of Community.'' (Corrections in this space yesterday misstated the publication dates of both articles.)


UserPostedImage
Pack93z
13 years ago
Hmmm.. trying to find the lucid use for posting an article from 1990..



I am sure there is some cause and effect at play.. but it escapes me.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"
Nonstopdrivel
13 years ago
Just an article I found interesting. She was the last person to be charged with adultery in the state of Wisconsin. I think she ended up getting something like 48 hours of community service.

UserPostedImage
Pack93z
13 years ago

Just an article I found interesting. She was the last person to be charged with adultery in the state of Wisconsin. I think she ended up getting something like 48 hours of community service.

Originally Posted by: Nonstopdrivel 





Was spousal support denied her from her ex-husband. Now that would be an interesting judgement.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"
Packerchick
13 years ago
I remember this, this happened in my hometown of Ashland.
I am a woman and I love football.
Nonstopdrivel
13 years ago
This story reminds me of the story of the woman taken in adultery (John 8:1-11) in that only the woman was prosecuted.
UserPostedImage
Fan Shout
Zero2Cool (3h) : Appears Jets released Adams. It'll be official in few hours.
Zero2Cool (23h) : We have re-signed LB Isaiah McDuffie
Zero2Cool (2-Mar) : Jets taking calls for Davante Adams. That $38m cap number hurting lol
Zero2Cool (2-Mar) : Guess it's not official until the 12th
Zero2Cool (2-Mar) : Deebo went for a 5th to Commanders?
Martha Careful (1-Mar) : Just like my late husband!!
Zero2Cool (1-Mar) : Once fired up, it should be good
Zero2Cool (1-Mar) : Sometimes, the first page load will be slow. it's firing up the site.
Martha Careful (1-Mar) : The site is operating much faster...tyvm
Mucky Tundra (28-Feb) : It's the offseason and the draft is still nearly 2 months away, what can ya do?🤷‍♂️
Zero2Cool (27-Feb) : NFL teams were notified today that the 2025 salary cap has been set at $279,200,000 per club.
Zero2Cool (27-Feb) : sssllllooooow
Martha Careful (27-Feb) : is it just me, or has the website been slow the last couple of days?
buckeyepackfan (26-Feb) : Damnit 2026 2nd rnd pick!
buckeyepackfan (26-Feb) : Packers get Myles Garret and Browns 2926 2nd rnd pick.
buckeyepackfan (26-Feb) : Browns get Jaire, + Packers #1 2025 pick and 2026 3rd rnd pick.
beast (26-Feb) : Rams trying to trade Stafford and Kupp, then signing Rodgers and Adams? Just speculation, but interesting
Zero2Cool (26-Feb) : Packers shopping Jaire Alexander per Ian Rapoport
Zero2Cool (25-Feb) : Gutekunst and Jaire Alexander’s agent, John Thornton, are meeting this week in Indianapolis to determine the future of the Packers’ 28-year-
Zero2Cool (25-Feb) : Gutekunst says Mark Murphy told him he can trade their first-round pick despite the draft being in Green Bay.
Zero2Cool (24-Feb) : Packers. 🤦
Zero2Cool (24-Feb) : One team.
Zero2Cool (24-Feb) : One team petition NFL to ban Brotherly Shove.
beast (23-Feb) : Seems like he was just pissed because he was no longer the starter
beast (23-Feb) : Campbell is right, he's rich and he doesn't have to explain sh!t... but that attitude gives teams reasons to never sign him again.
dfosterf (22-Feb) : I have some doubt about all that
dfosterf (22-Feb) : I read De'Vondre Campbell's tweet this morning (via the New York Post) Florio says that if he invested his earnings wisely, he will be good
beast (20-Feb) : I haven't followed, but I believe he's good when healthy, just hasn't been able to stay healthy.
dfosterf (20-Feb) : Hasn"t Bosa missed more games than he has played in the last 3 years?
Mucky Tundra (19-Feb) : He hasn't been too bad when healthy but I don't feel like I ever heard much about when he is
Zero2Cool (19-Feb) : Felt like he was more interested in his body, than football. He flashed more than I expected
Zero2Cool (19-Feb) : When he was coming out, I thought he'd be flash in pan.
Mucky Tundra (19-Feb) : Joey seems so forgettable compared to his brother for some reason
Zero2Cool (19-Feb) : NFL informed teams today that the 2025 salary cap will be roughly $277.5M-$281.5M
Zero2Cool (19-Feb) : Los Angeles Chargers are likely to release DE Joey Bosa this off-season as a cap casualty, per league source.
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : If the exploit is not fixed, we'll see tons of "50 top free agents, 50 perfect NFL team fits: We picked where each should sign in March" lo
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : Issue should be solved, database cleaned and held strong working / meeting. Boom!
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : It should be halted now.
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : usually spambots are trying to get traffic to shady websites filled with spyware; the two links being spammed were to the Packers website
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : you know when you put it that way combined with the links it was spamming (to the official Packers website)
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : Yep. You can do that with holding down ENTER on a command in Console of browser
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : even with the rapid fire posts?
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : I'm not certain it's a bot.
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : I've got to go to work soon which is a pity because I'm enthralled by this battle between the bot and Zero
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : Yeah, I see what that did. Kind of funny.
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : now it's a link to Wes Hodkiezwicz mailbag
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : Now they're back with another topic
Mucky Tundra (18-Feb) : oh lol
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : I have a script that purges them now.
Zero2Cool (18-Feb) : 118 Topics with Message.
Please sign in to use Fan Shout
2024 Packers Schedule
Friday, Sep 6 @ 7:15 PM
Eagles
Sunday, Sep 15 @ 12:00 PM
COLTS
Sunday, Sep 22 @ 12:00 PM
Titans
Sunday, Sep 29 @ 12:00 PM
VIKINGS
Sunday, Oct 6 @ 3:25 PM
Rams
Sunday, Oct 13 @ 12:00 PM
CARDINALS
Sunday, Oct 20 @ 12:00 PM
TEXANS
Sunday, Oct 27 @ 12:00 PM
Jaguars
Sunday, Nov 3 @ 3:25 PM
LIONS
Sunday, Nov 17 @ 12:00 PM
Bears
Sunday, Nov 24 @ 3:25 PM
49ERS
Thursday, Nov 28 @ 7:20 PM
DOLPHINS
Thursday, Dec 5 @ 7:15 PM
Lions
Sunday, Dec 15 @ 7:20 PM
Seahawks
Monday, Dec 23 @ 7:15 PM
SAINTS
Sunday, Dec 29 @ 3:25 PM
Vikings
Sunday, Jan 5 @ 12:00 PM
BEARS
Sunday, Jan 12 @ 3:30 PM
Eagles
Recent Topics
6m / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

5h / Random Babble / Martha Careful

6h / Random Babble / Martha Careful

22h / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

3-Mar / Green Bay Packers Talk / dfosterf

2-Mar / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

2-Mar / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

1-Mar / Green Bay Packers Talk / buckeyepackfan

1-Mar / Green Bay Packers Talk / wpr

1-Mar / Green Bay Packers Talk / dfosterf

28-Feb / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

28-Feb / Around The NFL / Martha Careful

27-Feb / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

27-Feb / Green Bay Packers Talk / wpr

26-Feb / Green Bay Packers Talk / beast

Headlines
Copyright © 2006 - 2025 PackersHome.com™. All Rights Reserved.