The prosecutor says Is it reasonable for a criminal to shoot himself out of a crime scene?
If someone tried to stop a bank robber can the bank robber just shoot them and claim self defense?
The prosecutor says this isn’t a 2nd amendment issue since Rittenhouse wasn’t allowed to buy the gun he was carrying.
The prosecutor says the AR-15 Kyle Rittenhouse carried was loaded with Full Metal Jacket rounds
The prosecutor says Kyle Rittenhouse never showed remorse for the people he killed.
He says when Rittenhouse showed emotion, crying on the witness stand, it was for himself, not for anyone else.
The prosecutor says Rosenbaum transgressions were lighting a trash bin on fire and using curse words.
‘If Joseph Rosenbaum were here I would have prosecuted him for arson, but I can’t because the defendant killed him.’
The prosecutor says ‘you don’t kill someone for arson.’
The prosecutor makes the case that Joseph Rosenbaum didn’t pose a threat to Kyle Rittenhouse
Prosecutor Thomas Binger on Kyle Rittenhouse:
“He thinks he’s some cop.”
“Nobody gave him that authority”
“He points his gun at people because he thinks he needs to protect property”
“You can’t use or threaten deadly force to protect someone else’s property” #Rittenhouse
The court will break for 25min.
During the break, the prosecutor apologizes to the judge for the length his closing arguments
The judge says “you could have gotten away with murder, I wasn’t timing it.”
Outside the Kenosha courthouse, a handful of Black Lives Matter demonstrators hold signs and flags on the court steps
The Defense attorney for Kyle Rittenhouse, Mark Richard, begins his closing arguments #RittenhouseTrial
The defense makes their case against the first two counts: reckless homicide and recklessly endangering safety
The defense makes their case for counts 3 and 4.
The most jarring thing in this homicide trial is that the prosecutor and defense are seriously referring to someone pivotal to this case by the name “jump kick man”
The Defense attorney for Kyle Rittenhouse holds the AR-15 style gun Rittenhouse used demonstration to the Jury that his client didn’t hold his gun the way the prosecutor said
The guns the prosecutor and defense attorney held are not loaded, the guns are checked by a bailiff before being handed to the attorneys.
Portland has come up twice now in these closing arguments.
“There were violent people causing trouble and the state wants us to believe it was ok.” The Defense attorney for Kyle Rittenhouse says.
Meanwhile outside the courthouse Patricia and Mark Thomas McCloskey, famous for pointing guns at Black Lives Matter protestors, are here to support Kyle Rittenhouse
Mark Thomas McCloskey, famous for pointing a gun at Black Lives Matter protestors, is here to support Kyle Rittenhouse.
He is also running for senate in Missouri.
Outside the Kenosha courthouse Mark McCloskey says Kyle Rittenhouse is a victim of cancel culture.
Some Kyle Rittenhouse suppers argue with Black Lives Matters demonstrators on the Kenosha courthouse steps
“Self-defense is not a crime” a Kyle Rittenhouse supporter says.
Closing arguments continue into the evening in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial in Kenosha
Jacob Blake’s uncle, Justin Blake, is on the Kenosha courthouse steps
Kenosha Sheriff’s are locking the courthouse for the night. The trial resumes tomorrow.
I am out of the courthouse.
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There are thousands of people marching all over downtown Los Angeles. There’s so many people that there’s multiple marches for dozens of blocks around.
This group in front of city hall sings “no kings”
LAPD and Sheriffs are out in riot gear in front of government buildings.
A crowd of several hundred protesters are outside the federal building. The California National guard and Federal agents are in formation in riot gear.
Someone in the crowd threw something and an officer fired a pepper ball, briefly setting the crowd scurrying.
LAPD declare an unlawful assembly outside the federal building. They warn protestors that they have 5 minutes to disperse.
Law enforcement officers across the state are trained that these types of munitions “shall not be aimed at the head, neck or any other vital organs,” according to guidelines from California Commission on Peace of Officers and Standards Training.