MILWAUKEE — The Milwaukee Police Department said officers responded to a shooting on Monday at 4:21 p.m. in the 2900 block of North Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.
The shooting, police said, stemmed from a fight among multiple young females. Police said they identified at least one alleged shooter, a 17-year-old male, but they are looking for information on possible additional unknown suspects. He is in police custody.
Six people, including the 17-year-old alleged shooter, all have non-life-threatening injuries. Victims are between the ages of 14 and 19 years old. Four victims were female, and two were male, according to authorities. Police said the injuries varied among the victims.
The shooting took place after downtown Juneteenth events had concluded. Milwaukee Police Chief Jeffrey Norman said there has never been a shooting in Milwaukee at previous Juneteenth events.
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Even though the shooting happened after the celebration concluded, Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson noted that with thousands of people in attendance, this could have been tragic.
“Today, there were families out here. There were kids out here. There were babies out here. It does not sit well with me… for folks to think that it is OK to take a gun out in a densely populated area and fire shots off,” Johnson said.
He did note that “Juneteenth was a safe event.”
Johnson and Norman stressed the concern in the city that more young people are involved in violence.
“We have a variety of ages who should not have been harmed, [and] should not have been involved in this kind of behavior,” Norman said.
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“There’s no reason that a young person should have their hand on a gun of any kind… It is completely and totally unacceptable,” Johnson added.
During a Monday evening press conference, officials called on parents to take responsibility for their children and gun safety.
“Milwaukee, what’s going on with our children? Parents, guardians, elders, we need to engage and ensure that this violence children are bringing to our streets cease,” Norman said.
Johnson said if someone has access to a gun and is planning to go to an event and shoot someone, they should not go to the event. He said the city has resources available to help those in distress, but “you don’t have the right to steal the joy that this community felt today.”
He also said no argument is worth ending with gun violence.
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“This is a story that plays out too often and it’s getting really old, really old,” Norman said.
Free mental health resources in Milwaukee are available here.
This story is developing. Check back later for updates.
MILWAUKEE — For many holidays, Tradition is key. That’s how New Year’s Eve is celebrated for Hailey Burch.
“We do this every year,” Burch told TMJ4, about ice skating at Red Arrow Park. “We’ve done it for the last five or six years at least, and it’s a lot of fun.”
Burch and her friends and family were just some of many who came out to the park to ring in 2025.
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“You got hot chocolate inside, you got benches to warm up with the hot chocolate if you need to,” said Scott Cychosz, who brought his family out to the park.
With music, pretty light displays, and more fun, it’s a great alternative to late-night parties.
“It’s important because you got kids now,” Cychosz told TMJ4. “and if you want to spend time with your family you gotta find alternates than spending the whole night out and drinking whatever.”
But some parties were going on, one in particular kicked off at 4pm and will last for 24 hours.
Victor’s Nightclub on the East Side will be shutting its doors on Wednesday. But before they do so, they hosted a 24-hour bash to celebrate new beginnings and to remember closing chapters.
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“It brings a tear to my eye,” said Julio Rivera, who has been going to Victor’s for decades. “but I’m appreciative that I was able to experience this whole thing. It’s just a great, great family.”
And just across the river, the deer district was packed for the fireworks show put on by We Energies.
If you need a safe way to get home there are multiple resources around the city.
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MILWAUKEE — I’ve done stories on tons of different artists—abstract painters, wood artists, musicians. You name it, I’ve done it. But one day, I was in the depths of the internet, and something caught my eye. I found a person who sews images of dive bar bathrooms, and I just had to learn more.
It started with the Roman Coin bathroom in Milwaukee. Then she did a Summerfest bathroom, Paddy’s Pub, High Dive, and a few others. The next thing Ella Clemons knew, her dive bar images were being featured at the Portrait Society Gallery in Milwaukee.
“I feel like everyone was kind of rocking with it here in Milwaukee,” Clemons, a fiber artist, said.
The 23-year-old, who is also a bartender, works out of a Bay View studio. It’s an old cream city brick building that has turned into artist’s workspaces.
“I couldn’t imagine myself doing a 9-to-5 or something like that. I just don’t think I’m built that way. I don’t know. I want to create,” she said.
It takes Clemons about 10 hours to sew a bathroom. She does commissions. Prices start around $200. That got me thinking – what bathroom would I want? I’m thinking of Hosed on Brady or the bathrooms at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Sheboygan which are super artistic.
So you may be thinking: dive bar bathrooms? It’s a little strange. It’s a little dirty. But there’s a beauty in the mundane. Clemons is forcing us to look at something we’ve seen before but in a new way.
“I like people to see something and be like, ‘I definitely know what that is.’ And I think people think it’s kind of funny to see it in fabric form, and I like it too. And it brings—I don’t know—it brings a whimsy to it, I guess,” she said.
She also made a series on highway billboards—you know, personal injury lawyers, religious billboards, fireworks advertisements, and adult store signs. Clemons is inspired by, “mundane day-to-day things that I feel I want to create.”
The UW-Milwaukee graduate has been featured in two galleries. She has a good idea for her next series too – sewing strange Facebook Marketplace listings. Beyond that, she has big dreams.
“I would love to make art full-time. That’s a huge goal of mine.”
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That is why in 2025, you can find her at her studio sewing dive bar bathrooms, highway signs, Facebook Marketplace listings, or something else just as fun and weird.
“It’s something I could be happy doing, like, forever. I could keep doing it. There’s always going to be more stuff to create,” Clemons said.
To see more of her work or request a commission, send her a message on Instagram.
Watch Ella Clemons’ story here…
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Milwaukee fiber artist turns dive bar bathrooms into art
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