As far as I understand, for the field of a uniformly moving charge, curl of $\mathbf E$ is zero everywhere.
Since $\nabla \times \mathbf E = -\dfrac{\partial\mathbf B}{\partial t}$, magnetic field should be constant in every point in space.
This sounds wrong, since $\mathbf B$ is supposed to fall off proportionally to $r^2$, and $r$ is changing in time for a moving charge. What is wrong with this reasoning?
Even worse, $\nabla \times \mathbf B = \dfrac{\partial\mathbf E}{\partial t}$ , and since $\dfrac{\partial\mathbf E}{\partial t}$ is not constant (because $\dfrac{\partial^2\mathbf E}{\partial t^2}$ is not zero), curl of $\mathbf B$ keeps changing.
But how can $\nabla \times \mathbf B$ keep changing if $\mathbf B$ itself stays the same?