Former Olmsted County deputy accused of child sex crimes granted permission for unsupervised visits, limited internet access

Amended release terms for Adamson

The day's local, regional and national news, detailed events and late-breaking stories are presented by the ABC 6 News Team, along with the latest sports, weather updates including the extended forecast.

(ABC 6 News) – A former Olmsted County deputy accused of soliciting sex from a child and possessing child pornography received permission to spend unsupervised time with his own children and limited internet access Wednesday, Jan. 24.

In November of 2023, Mathew Adamson, then an Olmsted County Adult Detention Center deputy, was arrested in a child solicitation sting.

RELATED: ‘Come all the way outside … I’m the only one doing something illegal here’: Rochester search warrants show alleged chat logs between former deputy, undercover officer pretending to be minor – ABC 6 News – kaaltv.com

After his first arrest, Steele County judge Joseph A. Bueltel ruled that Adamson could see his children, as long as Child Protective Services approves visits, and that he could access the internet with devices that Mower County downloaded monitoring services onto — but could not access social media, pornography sites, dating sites, escort services, or use any device without monitoring services installed.

RELATED: Steele County judge amends Olmsted deputy’s bail conditions to allow internet use, visits with children – ABC 6 News – kaaltv.com

Shortly thereafter, Adamson was re-arrested and charged with several counts of possessing child pornography, placing hidden cameras in bathrooms, and saving nude photos of Olmsted County ADC detainees to his personal devices.

RELATED: Former Olmsted County deputy re-arrested on child pornography charges, allegations that he saved explicit photos of detention center detainees – ABC 6 News – kaaltv.com

Winona County Judge Mary Leahy imposed conditions of release that did not allow Adamson access to internet-capable devices, according to court records.

After his second arrest, Adamson filed a motion to allow him unsupervised access to his own children, and included a letter from an immediate family member detailing difficulties transporting the children to school and extracurriculars without help.

Scott Springer, the assistant Mower County attorney prosecuting Adamson’s case, did not object to the unsupervised visits, and Bueltel approved the motion.

Springer did object to Adamson’s use of internet, even with monitoring software installed on his home devices, but conceded that Bueltel had already allowed it in one of the two cases.

“We don’t give murder defendants firearms and say, ‘You can only use these in legally permissible ways,'” Springer said. “And (the internet) is the tool in this crime.”

Adamson’s next hearing was not scheduled Jan. 24.