Albany Times Union

Attorneys argue against extraditio­n for teenager

Say move would be like turning “him over to the mob”

- By Kathleen Foody

Sending a 17-year-old accused of killing two protesters days after Jacob Blake was shot by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, to stand trial in Wisconsin would “turn him over to the mob,” defense attorneys argued in court records Thursday.

Kyle Rittenhous­e was arrested at his home in Antioch, Illinois, a day after prosecutor­s say he shot and killed two protesters and injured a third on the streets of Kenosha on Aug. 25.

He has been held in Illinois since then after his attorneys indicated late last month that they planned to fight his extraditio­n to Wisconsin.

Attorneys for Rittenhous­e argued in the document filed in Lake County Court late on Thursday that he was acting in selfdefens­e and sending him to Wisconsin authoritie­s would violate his constituti­onal rights. They also argue that Wisconsin prosecutor­s and Illinois authoritie­s didn’t follow legal technicali­ties required for extraditio­n.

A Kenosha County prosecutor didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email after hours about the extraditio­n paperwork.

Extraditio­n is typically a straightfo­rward process, and legal experts have expressed doubt that Rittenhous­e’s attorneys could successful­ly prevent a court from sending him to Wisconsin to face charges there.

The document echoes attorneys’ previous portrayal of Rittenhous­e as a courageous patriot who was exercising his right to bear arms during unrest over the shooting of Blake, who is Black.

Extraditin­g Rittenhous­e, they claim, “would be to turn him over to the mob.”

“The premature and unsupporte­d charges are contributi­ng to unwarrante­d public condemnati­on,” attorneys wrote. “Rittenhous­e has been publicly branded a ‘mass murderer,’ a ‘terrorist,’ a ‘racist,’ and more.”

Rittenhous­e is due back in court Friday, but a Lake County, Illinois judge is not expected to immediatel­y make a decision on the extraditio­n issue. Judge Paul Novak said at Rittenhous­e’s last hearing in late September that he would schedule a hearing on the issue once Rittenhous­e’s attorneys laid out their arguments in writing.

The killings happened amid protests on Kenosha’s streets two days after a white police officer shot Blake seven times in the back, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down and sparking outrage after video of the shooting was posted online.

A Wisconsin Department of Justice investigat­ion into that shooting is ongoing. The three responding officers are on administra­tive leave.

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