Guymon Daily Herald

Opening statements begin in Kyle Rittenhous­e murder trial

- By SCOTT BAUER, MICHAEL TARM and AMY FORLITI

KENOSHA, Wis. — Opening statements began Tuesday at the murder trial of Kyle Rittenhous­e, with a prosecutor detailing the young man's shooting of three people who were out on the streets of Kenosha during a protest against racial injustice last year.

Prosecutor Thomas Binger described what he said were "two of the roughest nights that our community has ever seen" before the shooting, when Kenosha was rocked by rioting, arson and looting over the police wounding of a Black man.

"Like moths to a flame, tourists from outside our community were drawn to the chaos in Kenosha," he said.

But Binger repeatedly said that amid the hundreds of people in Kenosha and the anger and chaos in the streets, "the only person who killed anyone is the defendant, Kyle Rittenhous­e." The shootings left two people dead and one person wounded.

Rittenhous­e was a 17-year-old aspiring police officer when he traveled to Kenosha from his home in Illinois, just across the Wisconsin state line, in August 2020 after protests broke out over the shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake, by a white Kenosha police officer.

Rittenhous­e said he went there to protect property after two previous nights in which rioters set fires and ransacked businesses.

The jury — selected with remarkable speed in just one day Monday, considerin­g how politicall­y polarizing the case has become — must decide whether Rittenhous­e acted in self-defense, as his lawyers claim, or was engaged in vigilantis­m when he opened fire with an AR-15-style semiautoma­tic rifle.

Rittenhous­e, now 18, faces a mandatory life sentence if convicted of the most serious count against him, firstdegre­e intentiona­l homicide, which is Wisconsin's top murder charge.

Binger told the jury that self-defense can be a defense only if Rittenhous­e reasonably believed that he was using deadly force to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm.

The prosecutor repeated that hundreds of people saw the same chaos and arson and experience­d the same tear gas from police, but only one person killed anyone. "When we consider the reasonable­ness of the defendant's actions, I ask you to keep this in mind," he said.

Binger emphasized, too, that one of those gunned down, Joseph Rosenbaum, was killed by a shot to the back. The prosecutor noted that the first two shots hit Rosenbaum in the lower extremitie­s, causing him to fall forward. Then came the shot to the back.

Binger also said Rittenhous­e initiated the confrontat­ion with Rosenbaum, and after he shot him, fled the scene instead of rendering aid, despite portraying himself as a medic earlier in the night. The others who were shot afterward "clearly believed" Rittenhous­e was an active shooter when they tried to stop him, the prosecutor said.

Rittenhous­e looked on in apparent calm in a dark pinstriped suit and tie. He occasional­ly fidgeted with a water bottle or glanced toward the jury box. His mother, Wendy Rittenhous­e, sat behind him on a spectators' bench.

About a dozen prospectiv­e jurors were dismissed Monday after they expressed strong opinions about the case or worried that they couldn't be fair. Others worried about their personal safety. "No one wants to be sitting in this chair," one woman said.

"I figure either way this goes you're going to have half the country upset with you and they react poorly," said another woman, a special education teacher who expressed anxiety about serving. She was chosen.

Twenty people in all were selected: 12 jurors and eight alternates. Eleven are women and nine are men. The court did not immediatel­y provide a racial breakdown of the group, but it appeared to be overwhelmi­ng white.

Rittenhous­e has been painted by supporters on the right — including foes of the Black Lives Matter movement — as a patriot who took a stand against lawlessnes­s by demonstrat­ors and exercised his Second Amendment gun rights. Others see him as a vigilante and police wannabe.

He is white, as were those he shot, but many activists see an undercurre­nt of race in the case, in part because the protesters were on the streets to decry police violence against Black people.

As jury selection got underway, Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder stressed repeatedly that jurors must decide the case solely on what they hear in the courtroom, and cautioned: "This is not a political trial."

"It was mentioned by both political campaigns and the presidenti­al campaign last year, in some instances very, very imprudentl­y," he said.

The judge said Rittenhous­e's constituti­onal right to a fair trial, not the Second Amendment right to bear arms, will come into play, and "I don't want it to get sidetracke­d into other issues."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States