The Commercial Appeal

Trial travesty: Rittenhous­e’s victims not victims

The judge ruled that the men who were shot can’t be called victims at trial. But they can be called looters. Is fairness and justice supposed to be one-sided?

- Suzette Hackney Columnist USA TODAY NETWORK

We talk a lot about the tenets of America’s justice system: the right to due process and the presumptio­n of innocence in all in criminal proceeding­s. We uphold the Constituti­on as the principle law of the land.

Until we don’t.

Excuse my cynicism as I attempt to process Tuesday’s ruling by a Wisconsin judge in the high-profile murder case of Kyle Rittenhous­e. Rittenhous­e faces trial this week for shooting three people, two fatally, during a protest against police brutality last year in Kenosha, about 40 miles southeast of Milwaukee.

Shot dead but not a victim?

Kenosha County Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder has decided those who were shot by Rittenhous­e cannot be called “victims” until or if he is convicted of a crime.

Yet two of Rittenhous­e’s victims (yes, I’m calling them that) are dead. Gunned down with an Ar-15-style rifle. But Schroeder will allow Joseph Rosenbaum, 36; Anthony Huber, 26; and Gaige Grosskreut­z, 26, who was injured, to be referred to as looters, rioters and arsonists in open court.

Never mind that these victims – that word again – were never convicted (or even charged) of actual looting the night they were shot.

So tell me, what did they loot? Is there evidence to suggest they set things ablaze with criminal intent? Do videos exist showing them rioting?

How is it that they’re not “victims” but they’re “looters”?

Taking the most generous view of the judge’s ruling – he called victim “a loaded, loaded word” – he was trying to ensure a fair trial. Where I stumble with that view is when I remember that fairness and justice aren’t supposed to be

one-sided.

As I see it, disallowin­g victim but permitting the use of loaded terms such as looter and rioter could sway a jury to feel sympathy toward Rittenhous­e – his victims were up to no good, they were menacing criminals, they deserved it.

This is our justice system

What a disappoint­ing and enraging start to a trial that in many ways defines who we are, what we champion and who we are willing to give the benefit of the doubt.

Due process. The presumptio­n of innocence.

This is our criminal justice system. This is why people kneel during the national anthem. This is why thousands of individual­s took to the streets after the murder of George Floyd. This is why many Americans demand systemic reforms.

This is a travesty, and we are all the victims.

National columnist/deputy opinion editor Suzette Hackney is a member of USA TODAY’S Editorial Board. Contact her at shackney@usatoday.com or on Twitter: @suzyscribe

 ?? ADAM ROGAN/THE JOURNAL TIMES VIA AP ?? Kyle Rittenhous­e, left, and other armed men claimed to be protecting property owners from arson and theft during protests Aug. 25, 2020, in Kenosha, Wis.
ADAM ROGAN/THE JOURNAL TIMES VIA AP Kyle Rittenhous­e, left, and other armed men claimed to be protecting property owners from arson and theft during protests Aug. 25, 2020, in Kenosha, Wis.
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