The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kenosha shooter’s defense portrays him as ‘American patriot’

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The way lawyers for Kyle Rittenhous­e tell it, he wasn’t just a scared teenager acting in self-defense when he shot to death two Kenosha, Wisconsin, protesters. He was a courageous defender of liberty, a patriot exercising his right to bear arms amid rioting in the streets.

“A 17-year-old citizen is being sacrificed by politician­s, but it’s not Kyle Rittenhous­e they are after. Their end game is to strip away the constituti­onal right of all citizens to defend our communitie­s,” says the voice-over at the end of a video released this week by a group tied to Rittenhous­e’s legal team.

“Kyle Rittenhous­e will go down in American history alongside that brave unknown patriot ... who fired ‘The Shot Heard Round the World,’’’ lead attorney John Pierce wrote this month in a tweet he later deleted. “A Second American Revolution against Tyranny has begun.”

But such dramatic rhetoric that has helped raise nearly $2 million for Rittenhous­e’s defense may not work with a jury considerin­g charges that could put the teen in prison for life. Legal experts say there could be big risks in turning a fairly straightfo­rward self-defense case into a fight for freedom that mirrors the law-and-order reelection theme President Donald Trump has struck amid a wave of protests over racial injustice.

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