Survivor of shooting by U.S. teen Rittenhouse to testify in pivotal
moment of trial
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[November 08, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
KENOSHA, Wis. (Reuters) - The only
protester shot by Kyle Rittenhouse to survive is due to testify on
Monday, offering potentially critical testimony to a jury that must
decide whether the U.S. teenager justifiably feared for his life when he
opened fire with his rifle.
Rittenhouse, 18, has been charged in the deaths of two men and for
attempting to kill Gaige Grosskreutz, 27, during racial justice protests
on Aug. 25, 2020, in Kenosha, Wisconsin following the police shooting of
a Black man, Jacob Blake.
Rittenhouse, who faces life in prison if convicted, has pleaded not
guilty and says he acted in self-defense. His lawyer said in court that
Rittenhouse would take the stand in his own defense.
Grosskreutz, a former paramedic who like Rittenhouse was carrying a
medical aid kit that night, has said he was in Kenosha to support the
protests as well as to help anyone who was hurt. He was holding a
handgun when Rittenhouse shot him.
His testimony on Monday could prove pivotal as the trial enters its
second week. Last week, multiple witnesses provided testimony that
seemed to support the teen's claim of self-defense, especially in the
case of Joseph Rosenbaum, the first of two men he shot and killed.
The trial is the highest profile court test of a civilian's right to
self-defense since George Zimmerman was acquitted in the fatal shooting
of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed Black teenager, in 2013.
Similar to that case, the Rittenhouse shootings have proven to be highly
divisive, with the teen emerging as a cause celebre for some
conservatives in the perennial battle over gun rights and many on the
left seeing him as a vigilante killer.
For prosecutors, Grosskreutz represents the only chance to question a
survivor and elicit testimony that could rebut the notion that he was a
threat to Rittenhouse, who fired a bullet that severely injured
Grosskreutz's right arm.
"It's important for the public to know Gaige's story and what really
happened that night," Kimberley Motley, Grosskreutz's attorney, told
Reuters. "Rittenhouse did not have a legal right to shoot him. Gaige was
not threatening him."
Mark Richards, an attorney for Rittenhouse, said the evidence would show
that Grosskreutz "went after" his client, and that an expert they plan
to call to analyze video of the shooting would establish that
Grosskreutz posed a threat.
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State witness Jason Lackowksi is questioned by defense attorney
Corey Chirafisi during Kyle Rittenhouse's trial in Kenosha
(Wisconsin) Circuit Court in Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S. November 5,
2021. Mark Hertzberg/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
"The slowed down video from our self defense expert
will leave no doubt what his intent was," Richards wrote in an email
to Reuters.
Kenosha County Assistant District Attorney James Kraus declined to
comment.
Shortly before midnight, Rittenhouse shot Rosenbaum, 36, in the
parking lot of a used car dealership. He then fled the scene and a
number of protesters started pursuing him, some yelling things like
"Get his ass!", according to video evidence and a criminal complaint
filed days after the shootings last year.
After stumbling to the ground, Rittenhouse shot Anthony Huber, 26,
who had swung a skateboard at him. Grosskreutz, who was approaching
the teen, froze after Huber was shot, took a step back and put his
hands in the air while still holding his pistol, according to the
complaint.
"Grosskreutz then moves towards the defendant who aims his gun at
Grosskreutz and shoots him, firing 1 shot," the complaint says.
In media interviews, Grosskreutz has said he came to Kenosha from
the Milwaukee area because he was disturbed about the Blake shooting
and wanted to provide medical aid to any protesters who needed it.
He said that while he supports the right to bear arms he was worried
about calls online for armed militia to police the streets.
"I never fired my weapon that night," he told CNN last year. "I was
there to help people not hurt people."
Last month, Grosskreutz sued the city and county of Kenosha, and
several law enforcement officers, alleging they deputized a "roving
militia" of white nationalists to counter demonstrators protesting
the Blake shooting.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne; Editing by Ross Colvin and Lisa
Shumaker)
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