Greenwich Time

Court: Rittenhous­e bound over for trial in protest shootings

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KENOSHA, Wis. — There is enough evidence to warrant a trial for an Illinois 17-year-old accused of killing two men and wounding a third during a night of unrest in Wisconsin, a court commission­er ruled Thursday after a contentiou­s hearing in which the defendant’s lawyer tried to show he had acted in self-defense.

Kyle Rittenhous­e, of Antioch, Illinois, is charged with homicide and attempted homicide for the Aug. 25 fatal shootings of Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber and the wounding of Gaige Grosskreut­z during a night of unrest two days after the police shooting in Kenosha of Jacob Blake, a local Black man.

During a preliminar­y hearing conducted via video, Kenosha County Circuit Court Commission­er Loren Keating found that there was enough probable cause for the case to proceed to trial. Rittenhous­e, who wore a covering over his nose and mouth, attended the Zoom hearing from the office of his attorney, Mark Richards.

Rittenhous­e told police he was attacked while guarding someone’s business and that he fired in selfdefens­e. He was freed from jail last month after posting $2 million bond, with most of the money raised through a legal defense fund set up by conservati­ves who view him as a patriot who was protecting other people’s property.

Supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement have painted .Rittenhous­e as a trigger-happy white supremacis­t who was in Kenosha that night to provoke a response.

During the hearing, Richards showed the court several screenshot­s from videos that were recorded on the night of the shootings to try to show that Rittenhous­e acted in self-defense, over numerous objections from Assistant District Attorney Thomas Binger. The photos showed Rittenhous­e running from another protester who had a gun, and Rittenhous­e on the ground as Huber struck him with a skateboard.

“The state is trying to put forth a one-sided, stilted view of what happened,” Richards told the court.

Binger argued that the defense was trying to use the hearing to “make this a self-defense case, and as the court has already indicated, that is an issue for trial. What happened before this incident … does not go to the probable cause as to whether or not the defendant committed a felony, and I object to the relevance of this.”

Binger said the evidence shows a felony was committed, but Richards disagreed, saying “the government can go off on their chaotic quest, but the evidence is clear.”

Keating also denied a defense request to dismiss two of the six counts against Rittenhous­e. Richards. argued that a misdemeano­r count of possession of a dangerous weapon by a person under 18 isn’t supported by the law — an argument the court rejected before.

Richards also sought the dismissal of a felony count of recklessly endangerin­g the public’s safety by using a dangerous weapon. Richards said the state offered no proof to substantia­te that charge, which was based on witness Richard McGinnis’ account of Rittenhous­e firing his gun with McGinnis in the line of fire.

The shootings happened two days after a white police officer trying to arrest Blake shot the 29-year-old seven times in the back, paralyzing him from the waist down. Video of the shooting sparked several nights of protests in Kenosha, a city of about 100,000 near the WisconsinI­llinois border.

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