Kyle Rittenhouse testified he was under attack when he killed two men and wounded a third with his rifle during a chaotic night of protests in Kenosha, saying: “I didn’t do anything wrong. I defended myself,” reported The Associated Press.
In a high-stakes gamble, the 18-year-old took the
stand at his murder trial to tell his side of what happened on the streets that
day in the summer of 2020, sobbing so hard at one point that the judge called a
break.
In an account largely corroborated by video and
the prosecution’s
own witnesses, Rittenhouse said that the first man cornered him and
put his hand on the barrel of Rittenhouse’s rifle, the second man hit him with
a skateboard, and the third man came at him with a gun of his own.
His nearly all-day testimony was interrupted by an
angry exchange in which his lawyers demanded a mistrial over what they argued
were out-of-bounds questions asked of him by the chief prosecutor.
The judge, though plainly mad at the prosecutor, did
not immediately rule on the request. And later in the day, he instructed the
jury to expect closing arguments early next week.
Rittenhouse is on trial over the shootings he
committed during unrest that erupted in Kenosha over the
wounding of Jacob Blake, a Black man, by a white Kenosha
police officer. He could
get life in prison on the charges.
Rittenhouse, who was 17 at the time, went to Kenosha
with an AR-style semi-automatic weapon and a medic bag in what the former
police youth cadet said was an effort to protect property after rioters had set
fires and ransacked businesses on previous nights.
The case has divided Americans over whether
Rittenhouse was a patriot taking a stand against lawlessness or a vigilante.
As he began crying on the stand and appeared unable
to speak, his mother, Wendy Rittenhouse, seated on a bench across the
courtroom, sobbed loudly. Someone put an arm around her. After the judge called
a recess, jurors walked by Rittenhouse and looked on as he continued to cry.
After the morning outburst, he was largely composed
the rest of the day, though his voice seemed to break at times as he came under
tough cross-examination.
Prosecutor Thomas Binger went hard at Rittenhouse
all afternoon during cross-examination, walking him through each of the
shootings. Rittenhouse continually pushed back, saying he had no choice but to
fire.
Rittenhouse said he “didn’t want to have to shoot”
Joseph Rosenbaum, the first man to fall that night, but he said Rosenbaum was
chasing him and had threatened to kill him earlier.
“If I would
have let Mr. Rosenbaum take my firearm from me, he would have used it and
killed me with it,” he said, “and probably killed more people.”
But Rittenhouse also acknowledged that the strap
holding his gun was in place and that he had both hands on the weapon. And
Binger suggested that Rosenbaum might have been trying to bat the rifle away.
The prosecutor sought to drive home the state’s
contention that Rittenhouse created the dangerous situation in the first place.
“You understand that when you point your AR-15 at
someone, it may make them feel like you’re going to kill them, correct?” Binger
asked.
Rittenhouse testified that he then shot and killed
protester Anthony Huber after Huber struck him in the neck with his skateboard
and grabbed his gun. Then he wounded Gaige Grosskreutz, saying the protester
had lunged at him “with his pistol pointed directly at my head.”
Rittenhouse’s decision to testify carried risks,
including the possibility of fierce cross-examination. And some legal experts
expressed doubt about the need to put him on the stand, given that some of the
prosecution’s own witnesses have already bolstered his
claim of self-defense.
Much of the testimony Wednesday was centered on the
shooting of Rosenbaum, since that set in motion that bloodshed that followed.
Rittenhouse said that earlier that night, Rosenbaum
was holding a chain and twice threatened his life. Apologizing to the court for
his language, Rittenhouse quoted Rosenbaum as saying: “I’m going to cut your
(expletive) hearts out!”
Later that night, Rittenhouse said, he was walking
toward a car dealer’s lot with a fire extinguisher to put out a blaze when he
heard somebody scream, “Burn in hell!” He said he responded by saying,
“Friendly, friendly, friendly!”
He said Rosenbaum was running at him from one side
and another protester with a gun was in front of him, and he was cornered. He
said he began to run, and he heard a protester tell Rosenbaum, “Get him and
kill him!”
Rittenhouse said he heard a gunshot directly behind
him, and as he turned around, Rosenbaum was coming at him with his arms out in
front. “I remember his hand on the barrel of my gun,” Rittenhouse said.
That was when he fired, he said.
He also said he thought the object Rosenbaum threw
during the chase — a plastic hospital bag — was the chain he had seen earlier.
Asked by his lawyer why he didn’t keep running away
from Rosenbaum, Rittenhouse said: “There was no space for me to continue to run
to.”
During cross-examination, Binger asked Rittenhouse
about whether it was appropriate to use deadly force to protect property, and
also posed questions about the defendant’s silence after his arrest.
At that, the jury was ushered out of the room,
and Circuit
Judge Bruce Schroeder loudly and angrily accused Binger of pursuing an
improper line of questioning and trying to introduce testimony that the judge
earlier said he was inclined to prohibit — video made some 15 days before the
shootings, in which Rittenhouse watches men leave a CVS Pharmacy and is heard
commenting that he wished he had his rifle so he could shoot them because he
thought they were shoplifters..
Rittenhouse lawyer Corey Chirafisi all but suggested
prosecutors were deliberately trying to cause a mistrial because the case is
“going badly” for them and
they want a do-over. The defense asked for a mistrial with prejudice, meaning
that if one is granted, Rittenhouse cannot be retried.
When Binger said he had been acting in good faith,
the judge replied: “I don’t believe that.”
As he first took the stand, Rittenhouse was asked by
his attorney whether he came to Kenosha looking for trouble, and he responded
no.
He testified that he saw videos of violence in
downtown Kenosha on the day before the shootings, including a brick being
thrown at a police officer’s head and cars burning in a Car Source dealership
lot.
Rittenhouse said the Car Source owner “was happy we
were there” that night.
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