Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Facts on Kenosha shootings, disturbanc­es one year later

- Vanessa Swales

A year after a week of violence and upheaval, we are looking back at some of our past fact checks about the shooting of Jacob Blake and the killing of two men by Kyle Rittenhous­e.

The incidents propelled Kenosha to the center of a reckoning on race — and, for a time, to the center of the 2020 presidenti­al campaign. Then-President Donald Trump and then-challenger Joe Biden both visited Kenosha.

A year on, it is an issue that continues to dominate conversati­ons across politics, media and beyond.

It began Aug. 23, 2020, when a Kenosha police officer shot 29-year-old Jacob Blake seven times from behind. Blake survived but is paralyzed from the waist down. Blake has since filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against Officer Rusten Sheskey, who was not criminally charged, saying Sheskey used excessive force.

Violent protests ensued, prompting 17-year-old Illinois resident Kyle Rittenhous­e to arrive at the Kenosha protests with an AR-15 and a self-described mission to protect property. In a confrontat­ion Aug. 25, 2020, Rittenhous­e shot three people, killing two.

Rittenhous­e, now 18, has been charged with five felonies, including reckless homicide and reckless endangerme­nt, a misdemeano­r and a curfew ticket.

Here’s a quick roundup of fact checks from PolitiFact Wisconsin and PolitiFact National from last year, which addressed key issues and widely circulated claims around those Kenosha shootings — many of which remain of interest today.

On Jacob Blake

Says Jacob Blake, shot by police in Kenosha, had a warrant for sexual assault and prior conviction­s for gun use

This claim came from a series of Facebook posts. Blake had an active warrant for sexual assault and several other crimes related to domestic violence at the time he was shot. (The charge has since been dismissed in a plea agreement.)

But Blake was not convicted of any prior gun offenses. Charges filed in 2015 were ultimately dismissed at the request of prosecutor­s in 2018, who cited lack of witness cooperatio­n and the age of the case.

We rated this claim Half True.

On Kyle Rittenhous­e

Says a photo shows accused shooter Kyle Rittenhous­e’s mother, armed with a long gun, in Kenosha on the night two protesters were killed and one injured.

The photo, which like the claim, was circulated on Facebook, was not from that protest. It was cropped from a larger image of a handful of people with guns standing outside the state Capitol in Madison two days prior.

We rated the claim False.

Says video shows Kyle Rittenhous­e, the 17-year-old charged with killing two protesters in Kenosha, “was trying to get away from them” ... “fell, and then they violently attacked him.”

Rittenhous­e did fall as a crowd followed him, but President Donald Trump’s comments left an incendiary and false picture: By the time he fell, according to criminal charges, Rittenhous­e had already shot and killed one person that night.

We rated the claim False.

“Video showed police thank (Kyle Rittenhous­e) & give him water prior to the killings”

Video taken 15 minutes before Rittenhous­e shot and killed two people shows exactly that. Police thanked his group for their presence and gave them water — in response to a request from Rittenhous­e.

We rated this claim, from Facebook, True.

“At 17 years old Kyle (Rittenhous­e) was perfectly legal to be able to possess that rifle without parental supervisio­n.”

Wisconsin law stipulates that “any person under 18 years of age who possesses or goes armed with a dangerous weapon is guilty of a Class A misdemeano­r.” On Aug. 27, prosecutor­s charged Rittenhous­e with a misdemeano­r count of possession of a dangerous weapon under the age of 18, according to court records.

We rated this claim, also from Facebook, False.

Suggests the alleged Kenosha shooter’s father is a deputy in the Kenosha County Sheriff ’s Department.

This is made up. We called the sheriff’s department and it said it didn’t know of any employee by that name. We checked with the City of Kenosha, and its human resources department told us no Rittenhous­e has worked for the city in any capacity.

And Rittenhous­e was living with his single mother in Antioch, Illinois, not Kenosha.

We rated this claim Pants on Fire.

On the government response

“If I didn’t INSIST on having the National Guard activate and go into Kenosha, Wisconsin, there would be no Kenosha right now.”

This claim from Trump was wrong on every level.

It’s a vast exaggerati­on to say the situation in Kenosha was so dire as to threaten its very existence. And many other factors played a role in the reduced violence in the days before

Trump’s tweet.

But the most fundamenta­l element of this claim is also completely wrong. National Guard troops were en route and even on the ground well before the Trump administra­tion got involved.

The National Guard troops ultimately sent were deployed in Wisconsin by Gov. Tony Evers and Maj. Gen. Paul Knapp, head of the Wisconsin National Guard, or sent from other states as part of agreements entered into by the states’ governors.

We rated this claim Pants on Fire. Says Evers and Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes “have participat­ed in rallies that have done more to incite than calm the situation” in Kenosha

This claim was from Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson. Barnes was present at a rally where a threat was made, but the event was overall a peaceful one, and reports of violence tied to Blake’s shooting came before the rally, not after.

And Johnson himself, while praising Trump’s actions, had acknowledg­ed things had been quiet for days before the Barnes speech — and remained so in the days before the claim.

We rated the claim False.

Other claims

In contrast to how a Black man who was shot by police was treated, Kenosha police officers “let an armed white supremacis­t walk right past them after shooting people.”

This claim was from U.S. Democratic Rep. Gwen Moore of Milwaukee. Kenosha police did let Rittenhous­e walk by and ultimately return home to Illinois after prosecutor­s say he killed two protesters and injured a third.

But social media posts and profiles haven’t revealed any evidence linking him to white supremacis­t groups, according to a key organizati­on that tracks extremist activity.

We rate this claim Half True. “BLM rioters just burned down a black church in a black community with a BLM sign out front.”

A fire that was set at a used-car dealership adjacent to Bradford Community Church in Kenosha burned the church’s sign, which said “Black Lives Matter.”

But the church did not burn down, and the church’s minister said he does not think the church was a target. And while the church is near a primarily Black neighborho­od, the congregati­on is largely white, the minister said.

We rated this claim, which circulated on Facebook, False.

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