Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wis. shooter’s trial should last 2 weeks

Potential jurors will get questionna­ires

- By Todd Richmond

MADISON, Wis. — The November trial of Kyle Rittenhous­e, an Illinois man charged with killing two people during protests that followed the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Wisconsin last year, will take up to two weeks, attorneys said Friday.

Prosecutor­s and Rittenhous­e’s attorneys confirmed with Kenosha County Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder during a 10-minute status conference that the trial will begin Nov. 1. Both sides said they don’t expect the proceeding to last the full two weeks.

In a sign of the intense publicity surroundin­g the case, they also told the judge they plan to send out questionna­ires to prospectiv­e jurors to ask them about their background and beliefs. The questionna­ires can help attorneys decide whom to strike from the pool. Attorneys in the trial of a white former police officer who was convicted of killing George Floyd in Minneapoli­s used such questionna­ires.

Schroeder said he wants to see the questionna­ires by Aug. 1.

Rittenhous­e appeared in person in the courtroom for the first time since he was arrested last year. COVID-19 protocols have forced him to appear via video at previous proceeding­s, but those restrictio­ns have been lifted.

Prosecutor­s say Rittenhous­e, who was 17 at the time, shot and killed two people and wounded a third in August after traveling from his home in Antioch, Illinois, to Kenosha.

The city was in the throes of several nights of sometimes violent demonstrat­ions after Officer Rusten Sheskey shot Blake, leaving the Black man paralyzed from the waist down.

Rittenhous­e and his attorneys have said he went to Kenosha to protect businesses. Video shows Rittenhous­e, armed with an assault-style rifle, shooting Joseph Rosenbaum, Anthony Huber and Gaige Grosskreut­z. Rosenbaum and Huber died. Grosskreut­z survived his wounds.

Cellphone footage shows Rittenhous­e, who is white, walking past police lines with his hands up and his rifle still slung over his shoulder even as protesters screamed that he had just shot people.

He turned himself in to police in Antioch several hours later, maintainin­g that the three men attacked him and he fired in self-defense.

 ?? Sean Krajacic The Associated Press ?? Kyle Rittenhous­e, right, listens to attorney Mark Richards during Rittenhous­e’s pretrial hearing Friday in Kenosha, Wis.
Sean Krajacic The Associated Press Kyle Rittenhous­e, right, listens to attorney Mark Richards during Rittenhous­e’s pretrial hearing Friday in Kenosha, Wis.

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