In 2000, fearsome Outlaws Motorcycle Club “enforcer” Randall “Madman” Miller was being sentenced to life in prison in a racketeering case that targeted numerous members of the biker gang and covered an array of horrific crimes. And U.S. District Judge J.P. Stadtmueller lamented it was too bad he couldn’t give him the death penalty.
Miller sat in court then, silent, shaking his head. Now, 24 years later, Miller is admitting he committed the three murders detailed in the racketeering case — including the grisly, high-profile killings of Morris and Ruth Gauger near far northwest suburban Richmond in 1993.
“I have tried to write this letter 1,000 times because it has been such a heavy burden on my heart for a very long time,” Miller wrote to the judge in his latest bid to be released from prison, largely because he’s in bad shape physically with an array of ailments. “I have to admit that I was wrong and accept responsibility for the fact that my choices have caused pain to people and should have never happened.
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