A Gustavus Adolphus College business professor indicted on fraud and money laundering charges last week will remain jailed pending a mental health evaluation, an unusual step in white-collar cases that was prompted by screeds calling for the execution of federal authorities.
A federal magistrate judge on Wednesday ordered James Anthony Kroger, 45, of Cottonwood, Minn., to stay detained after prosecutors drew attention to a couple of writings that he produced and aimed at law enforcement and judicial officials.
In a two-part series dubbed “The Kroger Report” — one of which totaled 1,114 pages — Kroger accused the FBI of trying to kill him with fighter jets and infect him with rabid bats. Most troubling to prosecutors, however, was a lengthy and detailed passage calling for U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger to be publicly executed.
“This isn’t a case where we risk the defendant threatening people or we risk him obstructing people,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Melinda Williams. “This is a case where he has already done it. When he says he’s going to hurt people, we should believe him.”
A federal grand jury indicted Kroger last week on wire fraud, bankruptcy fraud and money laundering charges stemming from allegations that he embezzled $690,000 from a joint real estate venture.
Kroger has been an assistant professor at Gustavus Adolphus in St. Peter, Minn., since January, and previously taught at Bemidji State University and elsewhere in the country. He responded to a Star Tribune request for comment preceding his Friday arrest by sharing both “Kroger Reports,” which he said he also sent to the Lyon County Sheriff in Marshall, Minn., and federal law enforcement and judicial officials.
The report includes allegations of misdeeds against the business partner whom prosecutors allege Kroger victimized. It also features selfie photographs of Kroger posing with a statue of a green extraterrestrial holding what appears to be fake firearms.
Luger’s office cited those reports as grounds to keep Kroger jailed as his fraud case proceeded, arguing that no conditions of release could ensure the public’s safety. Williams on Wednesday said that the government has not yet decided whether to pursue additional charges related to Kroger’s statements calling for Luger to be executed.