
(Photo by Kevin Mathewson, Kenosha County Eye)
KENOSHA, Wis. – A 40-year-old Kenosha man who already faced charges in two felony cases was arrested for a third time in just over three weeks—this time for allegedly violating a domestic abuse no-contact order and making illegal jailhouse calls to the victim.

(Kenosha County Sheriff)

(Kenosha County Sheriff)
Ryan M. Phillips was formally charged Thursday with one count of felony bail jumping and two counts of contact after a domestic abuse arrest. Court Commissioner William Michel II set Phillips’ bail at $7,000 cash. He remains in custody at the Kenosha County Jail pending a preliminary hearing scheduled for July 11.
This marks Phillips’ third arrest since June 6.
The first case, filed June 11, charged him with maintaining a drug house, harboring a felon, and threatening to shoot a Kenosha police officer. He posted $5,000 bail on June 18.
Just two days later, on June 20, Phillips was arrested again—this time for allegedly battering his roommate, damaging his computer, and threatening to “beat [his] ass” during a dispute over a request for a ride to buy crack cocaine. He was charged June 24 with felony bail jumping, criminal damage to property, and disorderly conduct with a domestic abuse enhancer. Bail in that case was set at $7,000.
According to the newest criminal complaint, Phillips violated a 72-hour no-contact provision following his June 20 arrest by calling the alleged victim, Richard Motes, twice from the Kenosha County Jail. Jail staff confirmed the calls came from Phillips’ inmate PIN and voice authentication system. The calls occurred on June 20 and June 22—both within the restricted window. Additionally, Motes reported being contacted by Phillips’ mother and daughter, who he said tried to pressure him into recanting his previous statement to police.
Authorities say the jail calls and third-party contact were clear violations of the domestic abuse protective order and conditions of Phillips’ felony bond.
If convicted on all charges across his three pending cases, Phillips faces more than 25 years in prison.
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One Response
Not a bright individual