STURGEON BAY, Wis. — The former president of Franklin College pleaded no contest to child sex crime charges in a Wisconsin Court Thursday.
Thomas Minar, 58, was fired by the college in January 2020 after he was arrested on suspicion of the crimes.
Wisconsin court records show Minar pleaded no contest to one count of child enticement and three counts of possession of child pornography, all class D felonies.
Prosecutors in Door County, Wis. said Minar was arrested while trying to meet a teenager after a sexually explicit chat through an online dating site.
According to court documents, Minar was allegedly using a cell phone app called "Grindr," which is a platform "commonly used by gay males to meet other males to meet up for sexual encounters," when he began contacting a person he thought was a 15-year-old boy. The person was actually an undercover police officer.
After being arrested at a local McDonald's after making plans to meet, Minar reportedly told officers he was attracted to young males but that the sexually-explicit chat was only "fantasy chat."
Minar had been president of Franklin College for five years and had previously announced plans to leave the school at the end of the academic year ending in 2020.
Court records show Minar is scheduled to be sentenced on June 6.
-
Indianapolis man charged in 2-year-old's shooting death
A 23-year-old man has been arrested in Chicago for his alleged role in the death of a 2-year-old Indianapolis girl this summer.IMPD: Sexual assault suspect caught after Monon Trail attacks
Indianapolis police have arrested a 27-year-old man in connection with two sexual assault attacks on the Monon Trail earlier this month.A taste of Nashville in Indianapolis: Clayton's Country Bar opens downtown
49 S. Meridian Street, the address of the old Hard Rock Cafe, has been vacant for years. That's changing. Country singer-songwriter Clayton Anderson is bringing music back to the space.Indy leaders vote down youth curfew fines for parents
Some members of the City-County Council are against a proposal that would penalize the parents of kids who violate the city’s curfew. But some residents feel those consequences are necessary.