Wisconsin Man Charged with Attempted Murder After Alleged Stabbing (What’s in the Complaint)

Quick take

A Wisconsin man has been charged after a 911 call and a criminal complaint described an alleged stabbing during a domestic dispute. This is a source-led summary of what is alleged in the complaint and what is publicly reported so far. No speculation.

Key facts (at a glance)

  • Defendant (reported): Kevin A. Fischer
  • Jurisdiction (reported): Wisconsin (Washington County referenced in local reporting)
  • Charges (reported): Attempted murder; use of a dangerous weapon; domestic abuse
  • Procedural posture (reported): Preliminary hearing scheduled for 2 April

What’s alleged (as reported)

CrimeOnline reports that a criminal complaint filed Monday alleges Fischer called 911 in the early hours of Sunday morning and reported that he had stabbed his fiancée during an argument. The report says responding officers forced entry through a locked security door and then located the injured woman inside the residence.

CrimeOnline’s report describes statements attributed to the victim on the way to hospital, including that Fischer had been drinking and that the assault appeared to come suddenly. The report also states the victim underwent surgery and survived, and that officers recovered knives and other items from the residence.

What we know vs what we don’t (yet)

What we know (from the reporting and cited complaint):

  • Charges have been filed against Kevin A. Fischer, including attempted murder and domestic-abuse related allegations (as reported).
  • The reporting cites a criminal complaint and describes an emergency call and an alleged assault inside a residence.
  • A preliminary hearing date is reported (2 April).

What we don’t know (without full primary documents / court records):

  • The complete, verbatim complaint and any exhibits (we have reporting summaries and a hosted document link).
  • The precise statutory citations for each count and any charging amendments.
  • What evidence will be introduced at the preliminary hearing, and what is disputed.

Sources


Note: This post summarises allegations. A criminal complaint is not proof. Proceedings will determine what is supported by admissible evidence.

caseunrestededitor Avatar

Published by

Categories:

Leave a Reply

Get updates

Facts-first true crime updates + case explainers. Unsubscribe anytime.

Case Unrested

© 2026 Case: Unrested — Stay curious, stay creepy.

Discover more from Case Unrested

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading