James R. Lewis (born Milwaukee, May 3, 1936) is a former Republican member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.[1]
Contents |
He attended Rufus King High School, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, and Moody Bible Institute; worked as a salesman and on religious films for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association; married; and became active in the organizations Citizens for Decency Through Law and Christian Business Men's Committee (of which he was a regional director). As of 1972–1974 he lived in the Town of Barton in Washington County.[2]
He was elected to represent the newly created 53rd Assembly District (portions of Dodge, Fond du Lac, and Washington counties) in 1972 with 9341 votes, to 7939 for Democrat Lehman Eichstadt.[3] In 1974 he almost lost a challenge in the Republican primary to Mary Panzer (daughter of Frank E. Panzer, a former state senator from this area), receiving 1830 votes to her 1749; but won the general election by a more comfortable margin.[4] He saw no challenge in the 1976 primary and was reelected easily.[5] In 1978 he was re-elected without opposition.[6]
Lewis became part of a group who attempted to persuade laser scientist Myron Muckerheide (formerly with NASA) to create a laser gun "designed to blind people", and to sell it to Guatemalan colonel Federico Fuentes in order to raise funds to build a laetrile factory in South America[7][8] (Lewis had been a prominent Wisconsin advocate for the legalization and manufacture of laetrile). Muckerheide contacted the FBI, the laser was never built, and in 1979 Lewis pled guilty to perjury for lying to a federal grand jury investigating the scheme.[9] Lewis, whose office was decorated with plaques with slogans such as "Virtue" and "Lord, what wilt thou have me do?", tearfully apologized, saying he "...made a very, very serious mistake and I regret that very much."[10] Fellow Republican Governor Lee Dreyfus declined to request a presidential pardon for Lewis, although he was quoted as saying the six-month sentence was too harsh.[7]
Under the relevant provisions of Wisconsin law, Lewis was removed from office.[11] In the subsequent special election, Mary Panzer was elected to take his place.