The Reporter (Vacaville)

Kenosha shooter’s defense portrays him as a patriot

- Cy Cernard Dondon

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.

“They’re playing to his most negative characteri­stics and stereotype­s, what his critics want to perceive him as — a crazy militia member out to cause harm and start a revolution,” said Robert Barnes, a prominent Los Angeles defense attorney.

Rittenhous­e’s high-profile defense and fund-raising teams, led by Los Angeles-based Pierce and Atlanta attorney Lin Wood, respective­ly, refused to speak to The Associated Press about their strategy ahead of the teen’s next court appearance Friday, a hearing in Illinois on whether to return him to Wisconsin.

But in a TV appearance and a blizzard of social media posts, they doubled down on the hero theme, describing Kenosha as a “war zone” and the young shooter as an “American patriot” and a “shining symbol of the American fighting spirit.”

“This is the sacred ground in Kenosha where a 17-year old child became a Minuteman and said ‘ Not on My Watch,’” Pierce tweeted above a photo of the city where rioters burned and looted just days before.

Eric Creizman, a former partner at Pierce’s firm, said the heated language in the tweets is not surprising because of his former boss’ tendency toward hyperbole, though he wonders if it will backfire.

“The question really should focus on whether this guy is guilty of what they’re charging him with,” he said, “instead of making it into a political issue.”

One politicall­y charged tactic critics have attacked as a longshot is Pierce’s promise to fight a charge of underage firearm possession, a misdemeano­r, by arguing U.S. law allows for an “unorganize­d militia.” Rittenhous­e wielded a semi-automatic rifle.

Some experts have even questioned whether the teenager’s team of four attorneys will feel pressure to hold back from making a plea bargain out of fear of disrupting the patriotic narrative and disappoint­ing donors.

Both Pierce and Wood have ties to Trump’s orbit and his brand of GOP politics, though it’s not clear if that played any role in their involvemen­t in Rittenhous­e’s case and how it is being handled. For his part, Trump has made statements appearing to support Rittenhous­e’s claim of self-defense, saying the young man “probably would have been killed.”

Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani hired Pierce’s firm late last year when he was reportedly under investigat­ion for possibly breaking lobbying laws for his work in Ukraine for the president, as did Carter Page and George Papadopoul­os, former Trump advisers caught up in the Russia investigat­ion.

Wood, a defamation lawyer who represente­d falsely accused security guard Richard Jewell in the 1996 Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta, is also a lawyer for Sean Hannity, the Fox News host with close ties to Trump.

And Wood made headlines recently representi­ng Nicholas Sandmann, the Kentucky teen in the “Make America Great Again” hat, in his lawsuits against news organizati­ons over their coverage of his encounter with an American Indian protester in Washington last year.

Both attorneys moved quickly after Rittenhous­e was arrested in his hometown of Antioch, Illinois, a day after the Aug. 25 shootings that came amid raucous protests in Kenosha over the police shooting that paralyzed a Black man, Jacob Blake. Rittenhous­e was charged with first- degree intentiona­l homicide in the killing of two white protesters and attempted intentiona­l homicide in the wounding of a third.

Pierce flew to Illinois to meet Rittenhous­e and his family that next day, according to his tweets, which included appeals for donations to the #FightBack Foundation that was started with Wood a few weeks earlier to fund lawsuits aimed at the “lies” of the “radical left.”

In Pierce’s telling on a Fox News appearance and an 11-minute #FightBack Foundation documentar­y, the real Rittenhous­e is not the wild-eyed vigilante critics have painted him. He is instead portrayed as a model citizen who had just gotten off his shift as lifeguard and was cleaning graffiti from a vandalized high school before he received word from a business owner seeking help to protect what was left of his property after rioters had burned two of his other buildings.

 ?? ADAM ROGAN — THE JOURNAL TIMES ?? On Aug. 25, Kyle Rittenhous­e carries a weapon as he walks along Sheridan Road in Kenosha, Ais., during a night of unrest following the weekend police shooting of Jacob Blake.
ADAM ROGAN — THE JOURNAL TIMES On Aug. 25, Kyle Rittenhous­e carries a weapon as he walks along Sheridan Road in Kenosha, Ais., during a night of unrest following the weekend police shooting of Jacob Blake.

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