Jury to decide fate of shooter Kyle Rittenhouse after closing arguments
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[November 15, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
KENOSHA, Wis. (Reuters) - Prosecution and
defense will deliver closing speeches on Monday in the murder trial of
Kyle Rittenhouse, offering to the jury vastly different conclusions
about why the U.S. teenager opened fire during protests in Wisconsin and
whether it was justified.
The arguments are the lawyers' last chance to influence a jury after
nearly two weeks of testimony that included considerable evidence
supporting the teenager's argument that he was attacked before he fired
his semi-automatic AR-15-style rifle, killing two men and wounding a
third.
The jury will then begin deliberations and attempt to form a consensus
on guilt or innocence in the most closely watched case involving 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.
Like Zimmerman, Rittenhouse has emerged as a divisive figure, viewed as
heroic by some conservatives who favor expansive gun rights and as a
symbol of an out-of-control American gun culture by many on the left.
Rittenhouse, 18, is charged with killing Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, and
Anthony Huber, 26, and for wounding Gaige Grosskreutz, 27, in the city
of Kenosha on Aug. 25, 2020. The shootings took place during protests -
marred by arson, rioting and looting - that followed the police shooting
of a Black man, Jacob Blake, who was left paralyzed from the waist down.
Rittenhouse, who has pleaded not guilty and testified last week that he
acted in self-defense, faces life in prison if convicted. He was 17 at
the time of the shootings.
Kenosha County assistant district attorneys Thomas Binger and James
Kraus have sought to portray Rittenhouse as a reckless vigilante who
came to Kenosha looking for an opportunity to use a weapon which was
illegal for him to possess due to his age, and have argued that he was
unjustified in deploying deadly force even when protesters pursued and
attacked him.
On Friday, the judge said he would instruct the jury that they could
weigh the prosecution's argument that Rittenhouse was the aggressor,
giving prosecutors latitude in closing remarks to highlight grainy drone
video they say shows the teen raised his gun in a way that provoked
Rosenbaum, who was unarmed.
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Kyle Rittenhouse looks back as attorneys argue about the charges
that will be presented to the jury during proceedings at the Kenosha
County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S. November 12, 2021.
Sean Krajacic/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
If the jury finds that argument credible, it would
raise the bar for self-defense under Wisconsin law, making it easier
to convict.
Kenosha County Judge Bruce Schroeder also decided to allow the jury
to consider lesser charges, as is common in a homicide trial. But
for the most serious counts Schroeder allowed only charges that
require proof that Rittenhouse acted with "utter disregard for human
life", a high bar sought by the defense.
Prosecutors were worried that the jury could have been swayed by
Rittenhouse's own testimony - in which the teen, at times losing his
composure and crying, said he did not want to kill anyone that
night.
"I believe a reasonable jury and a reasonable juror could, based on
the defendant's own testimony, not find utter disregard for human
life," Kraus told the judge.
The defense, led by attorneys Mark Richards and Corey Chirafisi, is
expected to highlight testimony from multiple witnesses that
Rosenbaum was behaving erratically that night, had made death
threats to Rittenhouse and others, and lunged at the teen and
reached for his gun before he fired.
The Rosenbaum shooting is seen as the most critical because it was
the first, setting the stage for the others.
Richards and Chirafisi can also point to video showing Huber
striking Rittenhouse with a skateboard and to testimony from
Grosskreutz, who acknowledged that Rittenhouse did not fire until
Grosskreutz pointed his handgun in the teen's direction.
Schroeder said the prosecution and defense would each have 2-1/2
hours to deliver their closing remarks to the jury.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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