Man killed by Rittenhouse challenged group to shoot him, witness
testifies
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[November 06, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
KENOSHA, Wis. (Reuters) -A witness in the
murder trial of U.S. teenager Kyle Rittenhouse said on Friday that one
of the two protesters killed that night was acting aggressively and
repeatedly challenged a group of armed men to shoot him, but that he did
not consider the man a threat.
Rittenhouse, 18, has been charged in the deaths of Joseph Rosenbaum, 36,
and Anthony Huber, 26, and in the wounding of Gaige Grosskreutz, now 27,
during a chaotic night on Aug. 25, 2020, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, during
protests following the police shooting and wounding of a Black man.
He has pleaded not guilty and says he acted in self-defense.
Jason Lackowski, a former Marine, was with Rittenhouse on the night of
the shootings. Prosecutors sought to use Lackowski's testimony to show
that he, while being similarly armed to Rittenhouse, did not see
Rosenbaum as a threat.
Prior to the shootings, Lackowski said Rosenbaum had taunted him and
other armed men close by to shoot him and also "false-stepped" in their
direction - a motion of stepping toward someone and then quickly
stepping back.
"After he did that a few times I turned my back and ignored him,"
Lackowski said, answering "no" to a question from Kenosha County
Assistant District Attorney Thomas Binger about whether he considered
the unarmed Rosenbaum a threat.
Lackowski said he was armed with an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle, similar
to the weapon held by Rittenhouse. He said he, along with others, had
come to Kenosha to protect a used car lot after rioting and arson in the
city in previous nights.
Lackowski's testimony came one day after two witnesses provided
testimony that appeared to be supportive of Rittenhouse's self-defense
claims. On Thursday, one witness said Rosenbaum cursed and lunged for
the defendant's rifle before he fired and another witness said Rosenbaum
had threatened to kill both Rittenhouse and him earlier in the night.
Under cross-examination, Lackowski acknowledged that, unlike
Rittenhouse, he was not alone when he came into contact with Rosenbaum
and that his calculation of the potential threat could have changed if
Rosenbaum had threatened his life.
Lackowski also said Rosenbaum was using "the N-word" while asking people
to shoot him, utterances that prompted other protesters to react
negatively toward him. The protests had been sparked by the police
shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, on Aug. 23, 2020. Blake was left
paralyzed from the waist down.
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Kyle Rittenhouse looks back as Kenosha County Sheriff's deputies
enter the courtroom to escort him out of the room during a break in
the trial, at the Kenosha County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin,
U.S., November 5, 2021. Sean Krajacic/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Corey Chirafisi, an attorney for Rittenhouse, pointed
out the context in which Rosenbaum allegedly used the racial slur.
"He's saying this at a protest for an African-American man who was
shot by police."
BIPOLAR DISORDER
Rosenbaum's fiancee testified that he had been diagnosed with
bipolar disorder, which prosecutors could use to argue that he was
the aggressor in the encounter and to question his mental stability.
Kariann Swart, Rosenbaum's fiancee, testified that Rosenbaum was not
armed when he went out the night of the shootings. She became
emotional, dabbing her eyes with a tissue, when she was shown a
picture of them together and she talked about her visit to the crime
scene the following day where she touched the ground where he fell,
wetting her hand with his blood.
Swart, who had been with Rosenbaum for about one year prior to his
death, said she believed he had taken his medications, which
included gabapentin for bipolar disorder, on the day of the
shootings. She also testified that he could not fill his
prescriptions because the pharmacy close to where they were staying
was boarded up due to the chaos in Kenosha.
A series of police officers were called to testify. One who
processed Rittenhouse's rifle said he was never asked to swab the
barrel of the gun for DNA and did not do so. The barrel is a focal
point in the trial because Rittenhouse's lawyers want to establish
that Rosenbaum lunged for it before he was shot.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Kenosha, WisconsinEditing by Alistair
Bell, Jonathan Oatis and Rosalba O'Brien)
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