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Kevin K. Klemstein is a former detective at the police department of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. Here are 13 more things about him:

  1. He is a resident of New Berlin, Waukesha County, Wisconsin.
  2. Aside from New Berlin, he has lived in other parts of Wisconsin including Lyndon, Milwaukee and Wisconsin Dells.
  3. He attended John Marshall High School and Milwaukee Area Technical College, which are both in Milwaukee. He studied criminal justice in Waukesha County Technical College in Pewaukee, Wisconsin and criminal law at Mount Senario College in Ladysmith, Wisconsin.
  4. He is a father of three.
  5. In 1992, he joined the Milwaukee Police Department.
  6. In 1995, he graduated from the Milwaukee Police Academy.
  7. He and Dena M. Klemstein co-own a residential property in Milwaukee, which was built in 2001.
  8. In 2012, he received an award for his part in a wiretap investigation that led to the arrest of 17 people, including the leader of the Menace of Destruction gang in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA and Milwaukee.
  9. On May 28, 2014, he and his fellow Milwaukee Police Department officers Jamey Jackson, Dennis Devalkenaere, Carlos Rutherford, James Hutchinson, Scott Schmitz, Erik Gulbrandson and Patrick Pajot allegedly forced Jamey Jackson to participate in a police lineup at the Milwaukee County Jail in Milwaukee.
  10. In 2017, his annual salary was $94,973. In the same year, he retired from the Milwaukee Police Department as a detective.
  11. On May 14, 2018, Jackson filed a case against him, Jackson, Devalkenaere, Rutherford, Hutchinson, Schmitz, Gulbrandson and Pajot. The plaintiff alleged that he was not afforded counsel on May 30, 2014.
  12. At 1:16 a.m. on September 22, 2020, officers from Juneau County, Wisconsin responded to his residence in the River Bay Campground in Lyndon for a report of a domestic disturbance by a woman who claimed he had hit her in the face. He did not comply when the officers ordered him to come out of the residence. He was forced to come outside only after more than three-hour standoff.
  13. He was 48 years old when he signed a $5,000 signature bond on September 24, 2020. He was charged with felony intimidation of a victim, felony strangulation and suffocation, felony false imprisonment, misdemeanor battery, misdemeanor resisting an officer, misdemeanor disorderly conduct and five counts of domestic abuse.
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