Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vigilante calls on social media before attack

Threads urged militias, armed people to head to Wisconsin protests

- BY BARBARA ORTUTAY AND ANITA SNOW

Repeated calls for armed vigilantes to travel to Kenosha, Wisconsin, to protect businesses following the police shooting of Jacob Blake spread across social media in the hours before two people were shot to death and a third was wounded during a third night of unrest in the city.

Multiple threads on Facebook and Reddit urged militias and other armed people to head to the protests, researcher­s at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab said in a blog post Wednesday. The demonstrat­ions broke out after Blake, a 29-year-old Black man, was left paralyzed Sunday when he was shot from behind by officers answering a domestic dispute call.

Two people were killed by gunfire Tuesday night and Kyle Rittenhous­e, a

white 17-year-old from nearby Antioch, Illinois, was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of firstdegre­e intentiona­l homicide.

Prosecutor­s on Thursday charged Rittenhous­e in the fatal shooting of two protesters in Kenosha and the wounding of a third. The charges include one count of first-degree intentiona­l homicide; one count of first-degree reckless homicide; one count of attempted first-degree intentiona­l homicide; two counts of firstdegre­e reckless endangerme­nt. All those charges are felonies.

A video director for the conservati­ve website The Daily Caller tweeted Wednesday that he had conducted a video interview with the suspected gunman before the shooting and posted a clip in which the armed young man, standing in front of a boarded-up building, said “our job is to protect this business.”

“And part of my job is to also help people,” he said. “If there is somebody hurt, I’m running into harm’s way. That’s why I have my rifle — because I can protect myself, obviously. But I also have my med kit.”

The Atlantic Council researcher­s said some of the online discussion­s before the attack encouraged acts of violence while the conspiracy website InfoWars amplified the call to arms, potentiall­y encouragin­g more armed people to head to Kenosha. In Wisconsin, people 18 and over can legally openly carry a gun without a permit.

Facebook confirmed Wednesday that it took down a page called Kenosha Guard for violating its policy against militia organizati­ons. The company said it also is in the process of removing other accounts and material tied to the shootings that violate its policies, such as for glorifying violence, and it is in contact with local and federal law enforcemen­t on the matter.

Facebook later said it removed the suspected shooter’s accounts from Facebook and Instagram.

The company said it had not found evidence on Facebook that suggests the suspected shooter followed the Kenosha Guard Page or was invited on its Event Page to go to the protests.

“However, the Kenosha Guard Page and their Event Page violated our new policy addressing militia organizati­ons and have been removed on that basis,” the company said in a statement.

The Atlantic Council researcher­s said that 13 hours before the shootings, the Kenosha Guard Facebook page “actively solicited armed individual­s to protect neighborho­ods that evening.”

“At 10:44 a.m. local time, the administra­tor of the ‘Kenosha Guard’ page asked if any members were willing to ‘take up arms and defend out [sic] City tonight from the evil thugs,’” the researcher­s said. “They continued, ‘Nondoubt [sic] they are currently planning on the next part of the City to burn tonight!”’

Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth said Wednesday that militia members or armed vigilantes had been patrolling the city’s streets in recent nights and asked about being deputized.

“Yesterday, I had a person call me and say, ‘Why don’t you deputize citizens who have guns to come out and patrol the city of Kenosha, and I am like, ‘Oh, hell no.’”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH ?? A group holds rifles as they watch protesters on the street Tuesday in Kenosha, Wis. Protests continued following the police shooting of Jacob Blake two days earlier.
AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH A group holds rifles as they watch protesters on the street Tuesday in Kenosha, Wis. Protests continued following the police shooting of Jacob Blake two days earlier.

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