
(File Photos by Kevin Mathewson, Kenosha County Eye)
KENOSHA, Wis. — Kenosha County Circuit Court Judge Jason Rossell told county supervisors last week that a statewide shortage of attorneys — not the District Attorney’s Office — is a major factor behind the growing backlog of criminal cases in Kenosha County.

(File Photo by Kevin Mathewson, Kenosha County Eye)
Rossell made the remarks during the Kenosha County Board’s Judiciary and Law Enforcement Committee meeting on Wednesday, March 4, offering a markedly different explanation than one previously circulated by Circuit Court Judge Chad Kerkman.
Rossell told supervisors the courts are dealing with a significant decline in practicing attorneys locally and statewide, particularly attorneys who take public defender appointments, which has slowed the pace at which criminal cases can move forward.
“Judge Rossell is correct. I am assigned to his branch, where many of the most serious cases are handled. While we may not agree on every issue, I respect his decisions and have learned a great deal practicing before him,” said Solis Monday evening.
According to Rossell, Kenosha County lost roughly 20 percent of its practicing attorneys between 2020 and 2024, based on data from the Board of Bar Examiners. The figure may actually understate the problem because the state’s licensing numbers include retired judges and attorneys who still hold law licenses but no longer actively practice.
The shortage is especially noticeable in felony cases, where proceedings often cannot move forward until a defense attorney is appointed.
Rossell said delays in assigning defense attorneys alone can push cases back 30 to 45 days, contributing to the growing backlog in local courtrooms.
He also revealed the scope of the caseload judges are facing.
Rossell said he is currently managing 967 pending cases, nearly double the number he inherited when he began his current assignment in 2018.
When Rossell took over that rotation, he had about 487 cases. The backlog climbed to more than 1,100 cases after the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted court operations statewide, and it has only gradually declined since then.
“The problem of backlog is not a Kenosha problem — it is a statewide problem,” Rossell told supervisors.
Rossell explained that strict legal deadlines also force judges to prioritize certain cases over others. Speedy-trial demands, interstate detainer cases, and defendants already in custody must be tried within strict statutory timelines or risk dismissal, meaning those cases move ahead of others regardless of the underlying charges.
Rossell’s explanation stands in sharp contrast to comments previously made by Circuit Court Judge Chad Kerkman.
In a January email discussing delays in Kenosha County courts, Kerkman attributed scheduling problems to staffing shortages in the District Attorney’s Office and provided a reporter with a list of specific cases that he claimed illustrated problems with prosecutors.

(Photo by Kevin Mathewson, Kenosha County Eye)
The email was sent to David Kollath, who broadcasts under the radio name David Cole on WGTD, a public radio station operated by Gateway Technical College.
In the message, Kerkman provided Kollath with more than a dozen Kenosha County case numbers and asserted that the District Attorney’s Office had mishandled or failed to prosecute those matters.
For example, Kerkman wrote that one felony drug case was dismissed because “no one from the DA’s office appeared in court.”
The email includes numerous other cases that Kerkman cited as examples of alleged problems involving prosecutors.
Kenosha County Eye obtained the email in February through a public-records request to Gateway Technical College, which owns and operates WGTD. The message was produced by the publicly funded college.
Judge Kerkman did not previously disclose this email to Kenosha County Eye.
After reviewing several of the cases Kerkman cited, Kenosha County Eye also spoke with attorneys involved in some of those proceedings. Those attorneys said the situations were far more complicated than Kerkman suggested and that responsibility for delays or issues often involved multiple parties, including defense attorneys, court scheduling issues, or judicial decisions — not simply the District Attorney’s Office.
In some instances, attorneys said the problems Kerkman described were not attributable to prosecutors at all.
The email itself also raises questions about judicial conduct.
Under Wisconsin Supreme Court rules governing judges, several provisions could apply to communications like the one Kerkman sent.
SCR 60.04(1)(g) prohibits judges from publicly commenting on pending or impending cases if the comment could reasonably affect the outcome or fairness of the proceedings.
SCR 60.03(1) requires judges to uphold the integrity and independence of the judiciary and avoid conduct that could undermine public confidence in the courts.
SCR 60.03(2) requires judges to avoid not only actual impropriety but also the appearance of impropriety and to act in a way that promotes confidence in their impartiality.
Providing a reporter with a list of specific cases and characterizing alleged failures by one side in those cases could raise concerns under those rules, particularly if any of the cases remain pending or involve parties appearing before the judge.
Kenosha County Eye asked Kerkman whether he believed it was appropriate for a sitting judge to send an email discussing specific cases and criticizing the elected district attorney.
Kerkman did not respond.
Rossell’s testimony before the county board committee last week paints a significantly different picture of the challenges facing Kenosha County courts.
Rather than blaming prosecutors, Rossell described a combination of factors including defense attorney shortages, the lingering effects of the pandemic on court scheduling, and strict statutory deadlines that dictate the order in which criminal cases must be heard.
Rossell most recently served as chief judge of the judicial district, a leadership role responsible for overseeing the administrative operations of the courts.
His explanation suggests the growing backlog in Kenosha County courts reflects broader systemic pressures affecting the legal system across Wisconsin — not simply staffing levels within the local District Attorney’s Office.
























16 Responses
We see again, how small kerkman really is.
Whenever I see the name Kerkman I know it’s some bs going on!!!! There run is over…. Let’s vote them all out
Kerkman Name = Dud ,not very smart , pay for play
Kerkman is going to keep his eye on this.
Defense attorneys won’t go to Kenosha because the Kenosha system is a joke due to judges like Rossell. The Milwaukee and Racine courthouses call Kenosha the “land of the lawless” and talk about “getting Rossell’ed” where he does whatever he wants and twists statutes to fit what he wants to do, even if they weren’t meant that way. Maybe if our judges weren’t complete jokes defense attorneys would be willing to appear in Kenosha but until our system is fixed this issue will continue
I agree 1000%%
Jason Rossell is completely responsible for his own trainwreck of a calendar. He refused to do trials during the “pandemic” so his criminal cases piled higher and higher. He then ran around the state as the Chief Judge and again ignored his calendar. Case after case got delayed… he leaves early and pretends to be so overworked. And word on the street is he spent a lot of time with his court reporter…. whatever that implies.
The only thing overworked around him is his belt, trying hold in his eversprawling gut.
Rossel looks a bit “light in the loafers”…are he and Kermkman a couple?
Totally gaaaaaaay
I am so tired of Kenosha County judges complaining about caseload and how busy they are. They can’t be too worried about expediting cases when most of them don’t work a 40 hour work week. Taking a day off every week to go golfing or not working on Fridays is not an average person’s work hours. All this while claiming the county needs another judicial branch. If all the judges worked a full week, another judge wouldn’t be needed. The combined loafing of our current judges equals more than the hours an additional judge would work. But another judge would probably not work full-time while being paid for a full-time job.
Kevin — you should do a story on the key-swipes of the judges, then people would see how little judges actually work for the pay judges are getting from our tax dollars.
You’re right. Both things couldn’t possibly be true.
The statewide shortage of public defenders and prosecutors is old news. The state senate has a bill that it could act on to increase hiring and also add judges.
Dagnabbit!! Where’s all the straight white Christian Republican attorneys at?! There was supposed to be a whole new shipment ‘em! Darn it, might have to hire a few lefty liberal bush eaters…
Why is it that every picture of Kerkman it looks like something is rammed up his ass..
How would you know? Firsthand experience?
Do you know how I know that you’re a homosexual..