
A former Seguin Main Street director is now formally charged in a child pornography case that has been quietly moving through Guadalupe County for more than a year. The indictment, filed in April, stems from a May 2025 arrest after investigators searched his home and seized what deputies described as child sexual abuse material. The case removed a prominent figure in the city’s tourism scene from daily duties last year and is now entering a more public phase in court.
According to the Seguin Gazette, 38‑year‑old Kyle Kramm was indicted in Guadalupe County in April on a single state count of possession of child pornography involving fewer than 100 visual depictions. The Gazette reports that a grand jury returned the indictment more than a year after Kramm’s initial arrest, marking a formal charging step in the ongoing case.
How investigators say the case unfolded
Investigators with the Guadalupe County Sheriff’s Office Internet Crimes Against Children unit served a search warrant in May 2025 at a residence in the 600 block of New Braunfels Street, where they seized digital devices that deputies said contained explicit material, according to KSAT. The arrest and search ultimately led city officials to place Kramm on administrative leave while the investigation moved forward, a step also noted in a local Seguin city official arrested roundup.
What the charge means under Texas law
The case is being prosecuted under Texas Penal Code §43.26, the state statute that covers possession of child sexual abuse material. Legislative changes in recent years have tied potential punishment to the number of visual depictions alleged. Legal summaries explain that possessing fewer than 100 images is generally treated as a third‑degree felony that typically carries a possible sentence of two to ten years in prison and potential fines, while larger collections can be charged as more serious felony levels. For a breakdown of the current penalty scheme, see analyses from VersusTexas and Saputo Law.
Next steps and city response
With a grand jury indictment in place, the case shifts fully into the county court system, where future hearings and trial dates will be set. Local reporting notes that arraignment and scheduling details were not yet available in public dockets at the time they were checked. After Kramm’s arrest, the city stated it would cooperate with investigators and “take this matter seriously,” language reported by the San Antonio Express-News and other outlets. As the case moves forward, Kramm remains presumed innocent under Texas law unless and until prosecutors prove the charge in court.









