Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Man gets 3 years in Kenosha riot arson

Family-owned furniture store destroyed in 2020

- Ben Schultz

A man will serve 31⁄3 years in prison for starting a fire that destroyed a family-run furniture store in Kenosha during unrest the day after Jacob Blake was shot.

Devon Vaughn, 23, of Racine, pleaded guilty in March to conspiring to commit arson.

Several buildings were set ablaze during rioting in 2020 that erupted in Kenosha following the police shooting of Blake, a Black man. Federal and local investigat­ors were not able to file charges immediatel­y but later released surveillan­ce photos of suspects and offered rewards for informatio­n about the fires.

Vaughn also will be subject to two years of supervised release and have to pay more than $1.7 million in restitutio­n after he serves his prison time.

Prosecutor­s recommende­d Vaughn be sentenced for five years, citing the nature of the offense and his history of drug use.

Vaughn’s defense argued against the government’s recommenda­tion and called for a sentence of no more than 21⁄2 years.

A white police officer shot Blake in the back during a response to a domestic dispute on Aug. 23, 2020. Video of the shooting, which left Blake paralyzed, went viral and within hours demonstrat­ions and protests grew into rioting, arson and violence in Kenosha.

On Aug. 24, 2020, Vaughn missed work to protest the shooting.

Vaughn had been drinking and had taken Xanax at the protest. He went into a local business, B&L Office Furniture, on 60th Street, with two people.

Vaughn placed burning papers onto a chair, and his offense lasted about 15 seconds, according to the defense sentencing memo.

“This act is entirely out of his character,” said his attorney, Joshua Uller.

A defense sentencing memo said Vaughn grew up in a small town in Ohio and was the only Black player on his high school football team. Vaughn graduated from high school in 2017 and got a job. The government’s sentencing memo said Vaughn had a limited criminal history.

U.S. District Judge J.P. Stadtmuell­er noted the fire caused nearly $2 million in damage and deeply affected the family of Linda Carpenter, who started the business with her husband more than 40 years ago.

Carpenter said at the hearing her family feared for their lives in the weeks following the fire.

B&L Office Furniture has since moved to 7600 75th St., about 15 minutes west of the original location.

Two nights later, 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhous­e fatally shot two protesters and wounded a third. Rittenhous­e claimed he fired in self-defense and a Kenosha County jury acquitted him of all charges in November.

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