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Criminal Justice
Former judge is killed at his home; suspect, a former defendant, said to have other targets
A front view of the Juneau County Courthouse in Mauston, Wisconsin. Photo by Joehanneman, CC-BY-SA-3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
A former Wisconsin judge found dead from gunshot wounds at his home Friday had once sentenced the suspect in the shooting to six years in prison.
Retired Juneau County, Wisconsin, Judge John Roemer, 68, was found dead and zip tied to a chair at his New Lisbon, Wisconsin, home, WISN reports. The suspect, Douglas K. Uhde, 56, was found in the basement with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to a June 4 press release from the Wisconsin Department of Justice. Uhde was taken to a hospital, where he was in critical condition Saturday.
Other publications with coverage include the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (here and here), the Wisconsin Rapids Tribune, Reuters, the Wisconsin State Journal and the Washington Post. How Appealing links to additional coverage here and here.
The person who called police had left the home and gone to a neighbor’s house. A neighbor told the Wisconsin State Journal that Roemer lived with two of his sons, and both fled. His wife and another son had died in recent years.

Uhde reportedly had a hit list of other targets who included Republican U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Democratic Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, according to Reuters.
Roemer had sentenced Uhde on a burglary charge in 2005 to six years in prison and nine years of extended supervision. Roemer got the case after an appeals court ruled that another judge had failed to follow the state’s truth in sentencing rules, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Uhde was released from prison in 2020.
Roemer was first elected to the bench in 2004. He retired in 2017 because of his wife’s health problems.
Before he became a judge, Roemer was an assistant district attorney for 12 years and an assistant public defender for five years, according to the Wisconsin Rapids Tribune. He was also an active member of his church.
Roemer “was known by colleagues for his sharp legal mind and his willingness to share his time and knowledge with others,” according to a statement by Wisconsin Supreme Court Chief Justice Annette Kingsland Ziegler.
Former Juneau County District Attorney Scott Southworth described Roemer as kind, passionate and empathetic.
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