Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Hearing set for teen in protest shootings

Prosecutor­s say Rittenhous­e kept move secret

- By Todd Richmond

MADISON, Wis. — A judge will hold a hearing next week on whether to arrest or increase bail for an 18-year-old from Illinois accused of opening fire during a police brutality protest in Wisconsin.

Judge Bruce Schroeder on Friday scheduled the hearing for Thursday for Kyle Rittenhous­e after authoritie­s said he failed to update his address with the court.

He is accused of shooting Joseph Rosenbaum, Anthony Huber and Gaige Grosskreut­z, killing Rosenbaum and Huber and wounding Grosskreut­z during protests in Kenosha in August.

The demonstrat­ions began after a white police officer shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, in the back. Rittenhous­e, who was 17 at the time, contends that the protesters attacked him and he fired in self-defense.

Prosecutor­s allege Rittenhous­e moved out of the Antioch, Illinois, apartment he shared with his mother after he posted a $2 million cash bond in November and hasn’t given the court his new address.

They filed a motion this week asking Schroeder to issue an arrest warrant for Rittenhous­e and increase his bond by $200,000.

Rittenhous­e’s attorneys have countered that Rittenhous­e has been receiving threats and moved into an “undisclose­d safe house” after he got out of jail.

They said in court filings that they offered to reveal the address if prosecutor­s would keep it secret, but Assistant District Attorney Thomas Binger refused, saying the address is public record.

They included an address in the filings with a request that Schroeder keep it sealed, but Binger replied that it’s just a post office box and doesn’t satisfy Rittenhous­e’s bail conditions.

Rittenhous­e, who is white, traveled to Kenosha on Aug. 25 after a paramilita­ry group put out a call on social media for people to protect businesses amid unrest. He faces multiple charges, including homicide and being a minor in possession of a firearm.

Supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement have painted Rittenhous­e as a trigger-happy white supremacis­t.

Conservati­ves upset over property destructio­n during some protests against police brutality last summer have portrayed him as a patriot exercising his right to bear arms and raised the $2 million Rittenhous­e needed to get out of jail.

Rittenhous­e fired John Pierce, the Los Angeles attorney who led the fundraisin­g effort, on Monday.

Pierce removed himself from the criminal case in December after prosecutor­s alleged that he has his own “significan­t financial difficulti­es” and shouldn’t be allowed to raise money for Rittenhous­e.

He stayed on as Rittenhous­e’s attorney on civil matters, leaving the criminal case to attorney Mark Richards.

Pierce confirmed he and Rittenhous­e had parted ways, tweeting that he had fought with “every fiber” of his being for Rittenhous­e.

Rittenhous­e’s supporters tweeted on their FreeKyleUS­A account on Thursday that Rittenhous­e fired Pierce on Monday and that he has hired another Los Angeles attorney, Robert Barnes.

Barnes tweeted that he was “happy to join the #KyleRitten­house team.”

 ??  ?? Kyle Rittenhous­e
Kyle Rittenhous­e

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States