Court: Rittenhouse bound over for trial in protest shootings
There is enough evidence to warrant a trial for an Illinois 17-year- old accused of killing two men and wounding a third during a night of unrest in Wisconsin, a court commissioner ruled Thursday after a contentious hearing in which the defendant’s lawyer tried to show he had acted in self- defense.
Kyle Ritten house, of Antioch, Illinois, is charged with homicide and attempted homicide for the Aug. 25 fatal shootings of Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber and the wounding of Gaige Grosskreutz during a night of unrest two days after the police shooting in Kenosha of Jacob Blake, a local Black man.
During a preliminary hearing conducted via video, Kenosha County Circuit Court Commissioner L oren Keating found that there was enough probable cause for the case to proceed to trial. Rittenhouse, who wore a covering over his nose and mouth, attended the Zoom hearing from the office of his attorney, Mark Richards.
Rittenhouse told police he was attacked while guarding someone’s business and that he fired in self- defense. He was freed from jail last month after posting $2 million bond, with most of the money raised through a legal defense fund set up by c on s er v a - tives who v iew him as a patriot who wa s protecting other people’s prop
erty.
Supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement have painted Rittenhouse as a trigger-happy white supremacist who was in Kenosha that night to provoke a response.
During the hearing, R ichards showed the court several screenshots from videos that were recorded on the night of the shootings to try to show that Rittenhouse acted in self- defense, over numerous objections from Assistant District Attorney Thomas Binger. The photos showed Rittenhouse running from another protester who had a gun, and Rittenhouse on the ground as Huber struck him with a skateboard.
“The state is trying to put forth a one- sided, stilted view of what happened,” Richards told the court.
Keating also denied a defense request to dismiss two of the six counts against R it t en hou s e . Richards argued that a misdemeanor count of possession of a dangerous weapon by a person under 18 isn’t supported by the law — an argument the court rejected before.