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Willie H. Jackson (left) and Cory R. Wille. (Courtesy Wisconsin Dept. of Corrections)

Two sex offenders released this month

Metro Wire Staff

Stevens Point police say two sex offenders are being released from prison soon and will be living in the city.

Cory R. Wille, 40, is scheduled for release on Aug. 18. He is described as a white man, 6’1″ tall, 212 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes.

Wille was convicted in 1999 in Portage Co. of second-degree sexual assault of a child. He was convicted of having sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl on several occasions, resulting in a pregnancy. He also had sex with a 13-year-old girl and grabbed another young girl’s buttocks.

Wille was also convicted of child abuse/recklessly causing harm in Wood Co. in 2019 and has past convictions for multiple other criminal offenses.

Willie H. Jackson, 51, is scheduled for release on Aug. 11. Jackson is a black man, 5’7″ tall, 195 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes.

Jackson was convicted in 2018 in Portage Co. for third-degree sexual assault after assaulting a female acquaintance and forcing intercourse with her.

Jackson also has past convictions of false imprisonment, intimidate a victim/use or attempt force, operating a vehicle without owner’s consent, battery, bail-jumping, and fourth-degree sexual assault, along with multiple other convictions in his past.

Wille will be living at 1019 Arlington Pl. in Stevens Point. Jackson will reside at 15:04 Water St.

Both convicts will be subject to lifetime registration with the Wisconsin Sex Offender Registry and lifetime GPS monitoring. 

The conditions are their release include no unsupervised contact with minors, no contact with their victims, and they are not allowed to consume drugs. Both are required to have regular face-to-face contact with law enforcement and will be supervised by the Portage Co. Office of Probation and Parole. 

Lt. Dana Williams from SPPD said the public is being alerted to the release as an exercise in public safety. 

“Sex offenders have always lived in our communities, but it was not until the Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification Law was enacted that law enforcement was able to share this information with the community,” a news release from Williams reads in part. “Abuse of this information to threaten, intimidate, or harass registered sex offenders with not be tolerated.”