Crime & Safety

Sex Offender Released in Waukesha After Rule Violations

Jessie J. Vasquez will live on East Moreland Boulevard.

A 45-year-old convicted sex offender has been released into the community after he was taken back into custody in July 2011 for violation rules of his probation, according to a notification from the Waukesha Police Department.

Jessie J. Vasquez, who originally was released in 2009, will live at 1356 E. Moreland Blvd., #1B. He is 5-feet 11-inches tall and weighs 260 pounds. He has black hair and brown eyes. He also has a 4-inch and a 2-inch scars on his left elbow.

According to the news release:

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Jessie Vasquez sexually assaulted a 13-year-old male household member on multiple occasions over a four-year period. On one occasion the offender battered the victim causing him to bleed. Other conviction behaviors include the offender having sexual relations with a 7-year-old male relative on multiple occasions.          

…  He will be a life registrant with the sex offender registry and will be submitting to face-to-face registration with law enforcement.  He is to have no unsupervised contact with minors, no taverns/bars/liquor stores, no contact with victim and not to purchase/possess or consume alcohol or illegal drugs.  He is to comply with sex offender rules and will be on G.P.S. monitoring for life.

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If you have any questions or wish further information please contact the Probation and Parole office at 521-5132 or the Waukesha Police Department at 524-3770.

Also from the news release:

The individual who appears on this notification has been convicted of a sex offense.  Further, his criminal history places him in a classification level, which reflects the potential to reoffend.

This sex offender has served the prison sentence imposed on him by the courts. The offender, under the supervision of the Department of Corrections, Division of Community Corrections, will be living in the location listed below.  He is not wanted by the police at this timeThis notification is not intended to increase fear, rather, it is our belief that an informed public is a safer public.

Sex offenders have always lived in our communities; but it wasn't until Act 440 (June 1997) that law enforcement is now able to share this information with the community.  Citizen abuse of this information to threaten, intimidate or harass registered sex offenders will not be tolerated.  Please understand that such abuse could potentially end law enforcement's ability to do community notifications.  We believe the only person who wins if community notification ends is the sex offender, since sex offenders derive their power through secrecy.


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