Michael Francke
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Michael_Francke an entity of type: Thing
James Michael Francke (/ˈfræŋki/; October 2, 1946 – January 17, 1989) was a New Mexico judge and director of the state's Corrections Department, the governmental bureau which manages prisons, inmates and parolees. He was later appointed by then-Oregon governor Neil Goldschmidt to oversee a plan to double the state's inmate capacity as director of Oregon's Department of Corrections. On January 18, 1989, his body was discovered outside the department's office building in Salem; an autopsy determined he had been murdered the night before. A local petty criminal was eventually tried and convicted for the crime, and sentenced to life in prison without parole. However, the convicted killer maintains his innocence, and several conspiracy theories have been advocated, claiming that the killing was
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Michael Francke
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James Michael Francke
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James Michael Francke
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Salem, Oregon, U.S.
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1989-01-17
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Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
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1946-10-02
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13699313
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1099469405
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University of Virginia
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1946-10-02
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Michael Francke
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1989-01-17
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Corrections Director
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Director of the New Mexico Corrections Department
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Director of the Oregon Department of Corrections
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1989-01-17
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May 1987
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1983
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May 1987
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James Michael Francke (/ˈfræŋki/; October 2, 1946 – January 17, 1989) was a New Mexico judge and director of the state's Corrections Department, the governmental bureau which manages prisons, inmates and parolees. He was later appointed by then-Oregon governor Neil Goldschmidt to oversee a plan to double the state's inmate capacity as director of Oregon's Department of Corrections. On January 18, 1989, his body was discovered outside the department's office building in Salem; an autopsy determined he had been murdered the night before. A local petty criminal was eventually tried and convicted for the crime, and sentenced to life in prison without parole. However, the convicted killer maintains his innocence, and several conspiracy theories have been advocated, claiming that the killing was a murder for hire conducted by corrupt state prison officials threatened by an investigation Francke was conducting into prison mismanagement. A 1995 film Without Evidence, written by Gil Dennis and Phil Stanford, an Oregon columnist who has investigated the case extensively, was based on the Francke murder and subsequent investigations by Kevin Francke, Michael's brother. The Association of State Correctional Administrators annually awards the Michael Francke Award to the top corrections administrator in the United States.
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Homicide by stabbing
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22230