Sentinel & Enterprise

In Kyle Rittenhous­e’s case, vigilantis­m goes on trial, too

- By LZ Granderson LZ Granderson is an Op-Ed columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

The trial of Kyle Rittenhous­e started Monday. What’s going on trial isn’t just the teenager accused of killing two men during a chaotic night in Kenosha, it’s also the idea of the self-appointed authority to take up arms — essentiall­y, vigilantis­m.

Rittenhous­e wasn’t law enforcemen­t. He wasn’t a member of the military. He didn’t even live in Wisconsin, let alone the city where civil unrest and protests happened after the police shooting of Jacob Blake.

Rittenhous­e is charged with killing Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber on Aug. 25, 2020, and wounding Gaige Grosskreut­z. He has pleaded not guilty.

But before we hear the prosecutio­n’s case or Rittenhous­e’s claims of self-defense, let’s be clear about one thing: Rittenhous­e was carrying an assault rifle in a state that prohibits minors from carrying firearms in public, with exceptions for hunting.

An acquittal wouldn’t just set Rittenhous­e free, it would set a legal precedent for other citizens to grab a gun and take the law into their own hands.

The truly unnerving thing is that judging from the video footage, law enforcemen­t did not see Rittenhous­e as a threat. In fact, before the shootings, officers gave him water as a show of their appreciati­on. And even after the shootings, Rittenhous­e was not seen as a threat.

The irony is that had local police viewed Blake — who was shot seven times in the back by a Kenosha officer — in a similar fashion, there would not have been unrest in Kenosha to begin with.

But Blake, who was holding a knife as he was trying to return to his vehicle in broad daylight, was seen as a threat and treated as one.

In August, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that prosecutor­s had a video of Rittenhous­e, sitting in a car outside a CVS, saying he that he wished he had his assault rifle so he could shoot at some men leaving the store. The county prosecutor said in court papers that the video “demonstrat­es that the defendant fervently sought to insert himself as an armed vigilante into situations that had nothing to do with him.”

According to the authoritie­s, Rittenhous­e’s friend, Dominick Black, allegedly bought the semiautoma­tic rifle for Rittenhous­e because Rittenhous­e was still a minor. Black allegedly asked Rittenhous­e to join him on his crusade.

What about any of this feels like law and order?

Rittenhous­e and his friend felt they had unbridled power to be enforcers, and that resulted in multiple shooting deaths. To decide this isn’t a crime would say more about our future than Rittenhous­e’s.

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