ANTIOCH TEEN EXTRADITED TO FACE CHARGES IN KENOSHA SHOOTINGS
Judge orders extradition ofAntioch teen accused of fatally shooting two Kenosha protesters
A Lake County judge ruled Friday that an Antioch teen should be returned to Wisconsin where he is accused of killing two people and injuring another person during the Kenosha protests in August.
Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, had been held in the Lake County juvenile detention facility before he was transported to Wisconsin on Friday.
Earlier in the day, one of Rittenhouse’s attorneys, John Pierce, argued in aWaukegan courtroom there are “fundamental and fatal flaws” in the paperwork seeking to have his client returned toWisconsin.
Lake County Judge Paul Novak rejected those arguments, writing in his order that two judges inWisconsin had determined there was probable cause for Rittenhouse’s arrest and that Illinois law did not allow him to re-evaluate those determinations at an extradition hearing.
Novak ordered Rittenhouse’s extradition and said other concerns raised by his defense could be heard inWisconsin.
A spokesman for the Lake County sheriff’s office said Rittenhouse was transferred to the custody of the Kenosha County sheriff’s office immediately after the ruling, about 3:45 p.m.
Pierce said he would be filing an appeal of the judge’s ruling, saying he “strongly disagreed” with Novak’s decision.
“We will never surrender. Kyle will be set free and cleared of all charges,” Pierce tweeted after ruling. “He is grateful to you all and asks for your continued prayers. God Bless Kyle Rittenhouse and the USA.”
Among other things, Pierce said the details of the criminal complaint in the case should have been outlined under oath before a magistrate but that that didn’t happen in this case.
“That is game, set and match,” Pierce said.
Lake County Assistant state’s attorney Stephen Scheller argued that all of the paperwork was in order and there should be no delay in returning Rittenhouse toWisconsin.
Pierce also referred to the charges against his client as political.
“I do believe to the bottom ofmy heart that this is a political prosecution,” Pierce said.
Rittenhouse, wearing a pale blue shirt and a dark tie, sat in the courtroom during the hearing but did not speak.
Rittenhouse was arrested at his Antioch home a day after prosecutors say he shot and killed two protesters and injured a third in Kenosha on Aug. 25 during protests over the police shooting of Jacob Blake. Blake, 29, was paralyzed in the shooting and is undergoing treatment at an Illinois rehabilitation clinic.
Rittenhouse is charged with first-degree intentional homicide in the killing of two protesters and attempted intentional homicide in the wounding of a third. He also faces a misdemeanor charge of underage firearm possession for wielding a semi-automatic rifle inWisconsin.
Several supporters of Rittenhouse and two dozen BLM Black Lives Matter protesters stood in front of the Lake County courthouse Friday morning.