Luke Wenke was accused (and later convicted) of sending the following self-pitying diatribe to his cyberstalking victim’s business partner just weeks after his release from federal prison in 2023. Prosecutors argued that this constituted indirect contact, thereby violating a court-imposed condition of supervised release banning Wenke from contacting his victim in any form.
In addition to blaming Luke Wenke’s cyberstalking victim for Wenke’s felony conviction and other perceived injustices, the email’s author used racist language (including the infamous “n-word”) and devolved into a seemingly unhinged tirade about how glad he was that George Floyd is no longer alive. The writer also referred to himself as an “incel” repeatedly throughout the email while fixating on Wenke’s romantic obsession, Ryan.
Luke Wenke was ultimately found guilty of the violation charge and sentenced to time served.
USA v. Luke Wenke – Email
May 13th, 2023
CASE #1:22-cr-00035, DOC. #59-2

Categories: Luke Wenke, Court Documents: emails; Obsessions: Ryan/Benjamin obsession
Tags: anti-American; Buffalo, NY; Capitol Riot, Cattaraugus County, conditions of supervised release, contact ban violations, Daniel Christmann, Donald Trump, FBI, New York Senator George Borrello, George Floyd, Hamas, indirect contact, Ivan Hunter, Libertarian Party, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Olean, NY; Olean Police, probation violations, racism, unwanted contact, Victim 1, violations of supervised release (VOSR)
