Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Brett Blomme was arrested Tuesday on tentative charges of possession of child pornography, the state Department of Justice announced.
Blomme, 38, was taken into custody by special agents with the state Division of Criminal Investigation following an investigation into multiple uploads of child pornography through a Kik messaging application account in October and November 2020, according to a statement.
Criminal charges are expected to be filed against Blomme on Wednesday. He was arrested in Dane County.
A 44-page search warrant filed Friday by a DCI special agent said investigators found Blomme, using the name dommasterbb, uploaded 27 videos and images containing child pornography. Two of the files were uploaded at a Milwaukee County government building, the search warrant said.
Suspect criminally charged in connection to crash that killed an infant urbanmilwaukee.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from urbanmilwaukee.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
MPD: 3 1/2-month-old girl dies from injuries in crash in Milwaukee
By FOX6 News Digital Team
Published
Wreck near 34th and Greenfield, Milwaukee
MILWAUKEE - A 3 1/2-month-old girl critically hurt in a crash near 34th and Greenfield Avenue on Milwaukee s south side has now died from her injuries, police say.
Officials say the wreck happened when the driver of the vehicle attempted to pass another vehicle at a high rate of speed when he lost control. The driver s vehicle then struck an unoccupied parked vehicle.
In addition to the infant, a 27-year-old woman and 4-year-old girl suffered serious injuries. Officials say the driver of the vehicle a 35-year-old Milwaukee man was not hurt in the wreck.
On March 13 of last year, six bullets from a Louisville, Kentucky, police officer’s gun ended the life of a promising emergency room technician with aspirations of becoming a nurse.
On the anniversary this Saturday of Breonna Taylor’s death, Milwaukee’s activists and artists will celebrate her life by honoring the city’s first responders and health care workers dedicated to saving lives.
“I know from being on both sides of the call, first responders respond to emergencies when not in uniform as a moral code of conduct and that alone is worthy of honor,” said Robert Agnew Jr., 33, co-founder of Milwaukee Artists for Racial Justice and an EMT student. “All professions are not created equal, and we want to let the first responders know, we see them, support them and to keep going.”