Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Friend who bought gun for Kyle Rittenhous­e told police teen predicted life behind bars after shooting 3 during Kenosha protests

- Chicago Tribune (TNS)

CHICAGO — Kyle Rittenhous­e predicted he would spend the rest of his life in prison after shooting three people during chaotic demonstrat­ions in Kenosha over the summer, a close friend told police hours after the gunfire.

Dominick Black, now

19, told investigat­ors that Rittenhous­e fled to the back room of a local business after Kenosha police rebuffed his attempt to turn himself in. Black said he met Rittenhous­e there and tried to calm him down after he fatally shot two men and wounded another.

“The dude’s sweating like a pig. He’s just freaking out. His face is white,” Black said in a recorded interview obtained by the Chicago Tribune. “He’s like, ‘I’m going to jail for the rest of my life. I’m done.’ (He’s) just scared.”

The interview was recorded Aug. 26 at the Antioch police station, where Rittenhous­e turned himself in shortly after the shooting. Rittenhous­e, his mother and two sisters also sat for interviews with Kenosha detectives that night.

Prosecutor­s have since charged Black with two felony counts of illegally providing Rittenhous­e, 17, with the rifle ? one count for each man who died.

Kenosha County Court Commission­er Loren Keating found at a hearing Thursday that there was probable cause to go ahead with Black’s prosecutio­n, rebuffing defense lawyers’ efforts to have the case thrown out. Black is due for an arraignmen­t Jan. 13.

In response to a

Freedom of Informatio­n Act request, Antioch police released recorded interviews with Black and with Rittenhous­e’s older sister, Faith, late Thursday. The videos give the first glimpse at how the investigat­ion unfolded in the hours after Rittenhous­e shot the men amid unrest in southeast Wisconsin.

Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, and Anthony Huber, 26, died from the injuries they sustained that night, while Gaige Grosskreut­z, 26, suffered a gunshot wound to his arm.

Rittenhous­e currently faces murder and gun charges in Kenosha County. Rittenhous­e’s attorneys have argued he shot the men in selfdefens­e. Family members and representa­tives of the men shot have rejected the idea that Rittenhous­e was justified in firing.

Violent protests erupted Aug. 25 in Kenosha after police Officer Rusten Sheskey, who is white, shot Jacob Blake, who is Black, several times in the back at close range. The demonstrat­ions — fueled by video of the shooting — turned destructiv­e at points, leaving parts of the city damaged.

The video shows Kenosha police Detective Benjamin Antaramian leading Black through a cordial interview that lasted roughly an hour. Black did not show visible signs of distress, unlike Rittenhous­e, who police reports indicate cried and vomited when speaking with authoritie­s.

After Antaramian told Black he was not in custody, the teen gave his account of events surroundin­g the shootings, which echoed previously released police reports. Black — who said he dated Rittenhous­e’s younger sister and had known the family for about a year — told the officer that the two went to Kenosha to protect several properties owned by the same person. Black said they brought assaultsty­le rifles “just in case they shoot at us ... just in case we have to defend ourselves.”

While taking the statement, the detective told Black that the protests had been “anarchy.”

Black said he spent much of his time on the roof of one business while Rittenhous­e walked around below with a medical kit and an AR-15.

Black said he had purchased the gun in his name at a hardware store in northern Wisconsin, but Rittenhous­e paid for it. At age 17, Rittenhous­e could not legally purchase the firearm on his own.

“I don’t know why ... the whole time I’m thinking, ‘he’s not 18,’” he told police. “In my head, like, I could have stopped it. But I know if I would have told him ‘no,’ he would have threw a fit.”

Black said he heard shots and then Rittenhous­e called him to say he’d shot someone. Black’s statements about what his friend later told him about the shootings largely mirror Rittenhous­e’s lawyers’ contention that the teen fired because people were attacking him and he feared for his life.

Black said he watched from the roof as Rittenhous­e seemingly tried to turn himself in to police, but the officers did not arrest him. Black said Rittenhous­e told him an officer had threatened to pepper-spray him during that exchange.

Black said that after the shootings, he and Rittenhous­e met in a building and decided to leave Kenosha.

“It was like, ‘you know what, we’re gonna get in my car, we’re gonna drive out of here before anything bad else happens to you, and we’re just gonna go back home and you’re gonna go to the police station,’” Black said.

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