Chattanooga Times Free Press

A defining image: Rittenhous­e nearly crumbles out of picture

- BY DAVID BAUDER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — As the last of five “not guilty” verdicts were read aloud on Friday, Kyle Rittenhous­e shook with sobs and collapsed, nearly falling out of sight of the television camera fixed on him in a Wisconsin courtroom.

It was instantly the defining image of the 18-year-old’s murder trial, which became such a subject of passionate debate about guns and justice that major broadcast and cable news networks set aside regular programmin­g to reveal the jury’s decision.

There was no shortage of strong opinions in the verdict’s wake.

“I knew this case was big,” Rittenhous­e’s lawyer, Mark Richards, said after the trial during a news conference carried live by the cable networks. “I never knew it was going to be this big.”

Rittenhous­e’s shooting of three people, including two he killed, during protests over racial injustice in Kenosha made him either a vigilante who was out to make trouble or a young man who defended himself from a mob, depending upon an observer’s perspectiv­e.

Following the verdict, some commentato­rs sought to separate that debate from the mechanics of the trial.

“You were seeing this play out in America online in a very different way than it played out in court, when you were watching every single detail,” said Sara Sidner, a CNN reporter.

On Court TV, Kirk Nurmi offered the view you’d expect from a network where lawyers predominat­e, saying the jury’s verdict “should be sacrosanct, regardless of what the court of opinion thinks.”

Commentato­rs Andy McCarthy and Jonathan Turley on Fox News Channel both decried how opinion had overshadow­ed news in the coverage of Rittenhous­e’s case. McCarthy, a lawyer, said people were losing faith in the idea that they have news coverage they can rely upon.

Turley noted how his job had changed.

“Up until recently, legal analysis was not part of the advocacy journalism model,” he said. “Whatever was happening with commentary, that stood apart. That changed in this case.”

Fox News anchor John Roberts introduced Turley’s analysis by saying that many people in the country had “convicted Kyle Rittenhous­e before he got anywhere near a courtroom.”

Roberts read tweets, some nearly a year old, that were critical of Rittenhous­e. He asked McCarthy: “What does this say about the rush to judgement by, in large part, politician­s and by what was supposed to be a respectabl­e media going into this thing?”

Some of what McCarthy voiced was evident in the choices made by networks covering the aftermath. Fox brought on David Hancock, described as a Rittenhous­e family friend, to praise the verdict and say Kyle “weathered a hell of a storm this past year, a hell of a storm.”

At roughly the same time, MSNBC was reading a statement issued by the family of one of the men Rittenhous­e killed.

“Not everyone is going to feel this was just,” CNN’s Sidner said. “There are two people who are dead.”

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