Springfield News-Sun

Jury selection underway at Rittenhous­e homicide trial

- By Scott Bauer, Michael Tarm and Amy Forliti

KENOSHA, WIS. — The trial of Kyle Rittenhous­e opened Monday with the challengin­g task of seating jurors who hadn’t already made up their minds about the young aspiring police officer who shot two people to death and wounded a third during a night of anti-racism protests in Kenosha last year.

The jury that is ultimately selected in the politicall­y charged case will have to decide whether Rittenhous­e acted in self-defense, as his lawyers claim, or was engaged in vigilantis­m when he opened fire with an Ar-15style semiautoma­tic rifle.

By late afternoon, at least 28 of the 150 or so prospectiv­e jurors summoned for the trial had been dismissed, about a dozen of them because they had strong opinions about the case or doubts they could be fair. Some expressed fear about public anger toward the jury but were not immediatel­y dismissed from the case.

Rittenhous­e, 18, faces life in prison if convicted of the most serious charge against him, first-degree homicide.

Rittenhous­e was 17 when he traveled to Kenosha from his home in Illinois, just across the Wisconsin state line, during unrest that broke out in August 2020 after a white Kenosha police officer shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, in the back. Rittenhous­e said he went there to protect property after two nights marked by arson, gunfire and the ransacking of businesses.

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: “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.”

Among those dismissed were a man who said he was at the site of the protests when “all that happened” and a woman who said she knew one of the potential witnesses in the case well and would probably weigh that person’s testimony more than others.

Another woman who said she watched a livestream video of what happened was dismissed because she wasn’t sure if she could put aside what she saw. One person was dropped from the case after she said she believes in the Biblical injunction “Thou shall not kill,” even in cases of self-defense.

 ?? SEAN KRAJACIC / POOL ?? Kyle Rittenhous­e looks back at potential jurors during the selection process Monday at the Kenosha County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Rittenhous­e is accused of killing two people and wounding a third during a protest over police brutality last year.
SEAN KRAJACIC / POOL Kyle Rittenhous­e looks back at potential jurors during the selection process Monday at the Kenosha County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Rittenhous­e is accused of killing two people and wounding a third during a protest over police brutality last year.

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