Judge in Rittenhouse case might be a tad biased.

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Well, that settles that.
Feds could still bring charges, if they wanted.
But I am skeptical that they will.
I hope not. The Kenosha Kid deserves a break after all this shit.
 

Schadrach

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It's really simple, you can only be armed under 18 if you're hunting, training in the military, or at a target range. So by being out with a gun he has to be saying he's doing one of those three.
You're doing that thing where you're ignoring what the law actually says in favor of the public policy goal it's supposed to work towards or a summary of the law from staff working for a handful of legislators. Those things do not supersede what the law actually says - this is literally why I brought up the Nebraska "safe haven" law, to point out that no matter what the broader goal is, the law says what it says and those words are what is to be interpreted.

"This section only applies if" means that that section only applies when those conditions are met, regardless of what broader policy goal it might be theoretically meant to forward. The exceptions to not being allowed to be armed while under 18 are if you are training in the military under adult supervision, doing target practice under adult supervision, or if you are possessing or armed with a rifle or shotgun and also in compliance with three other laws (one of which involves gun handling for minors 16 and under [Kyle was 17], one of which involves the requirements to get approval to hunt [he wasn't hunting, and you don't need a permit to not hunt], and the third of which says you can't have a short barreled rifle or short barreled shotgun [which is the only reason why the length of his rifle was relevant in the first place - this is the only way the prosecution could have even theoretically met the requirements for the section to apply]). It doesn't matter that the broader policy goal is to set regulations around children being allowed to hunt, the law says what it says and what it says it what you have to work from.
 

Schadrach

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I think the law says if the gun is of a specific size or smaller and the kid is over 16 they just get to have it, period. Otherwise the prosecution wouldn't consent to the gun possession charges being dismissed as they did. They'd object to it instead.
It's a specific length or longer, if they are over 16 and the gun is also a rifle or shotgun. Because short-barreled rifles and shotgun are broadly illegal. Think a sawed-off or a P90 (as opposed to it's civilian version the PS90 which is something like an inch longer to be over the short-barreled limit).

This is the law i question I've been arguing with them over all this time. (1) defines a "dangerous weapon", (2) states that a minor is not allowed to have such a weapon and it's a misdemeanor for the minor and a felony for whoever gave it to them, and (3) lists the exceptions to that. (3)(c) specifically says "This section applies only to a person under 18 years of age who possesses or is armed with a rifle or a shotgun if" and then names three other laws they have to be following - one of them is gun restrictions on kids 16 and under hunting, one is getting approval to hunt, and the third one deals with short-barreled rifles/shotguns.

The whole thing is them ignoring what (3)(c) says entirely and treating it as something like "there's an exception if you are hunting" because a couple of staff for a handful of legislators (the Joint Legislative Council) summarized the exceptions as being for military training, target practice and hunting in a piece that itself even explicitly states that it is not a policy statement.
 

Schadrach

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Verdict is in: Not Guilty on all counts. Godspeed Kyle.
Prepare for riots, I guess. I was kinda hoping for a guilty on the 2nd shooting, because at least one guilty might have been enough to stave off further violence and that seemed like the one with the best odds.

Everyone who was drawn out to the violence that night in Kenosha ought to be considered reckless endangerment to that community, and when someone dies from your reckless endangerment, that's reckless homicide.
But then you'd have to charge basically all the witnesses and anyone else present who could be identified with reckless endangerment, and that wasn't going to fly for political reasons. They don't want to start more riots by charging people with rioting...

A victory for everyone looking to normalize murdering their political enemies.
And all you have to do is inspire your political enemies to attack you first!

This is in the hands of civil courts now. Rittenhouse is going to have far worse chances there, without an asshat judge putting his thumb on the scales, against competent counsel, and dealing with preponderance of the evidence opposed to reasonable doubt.
Between being held to a much lower standard of evidence (preponderance is basically "ever so slightly more likely than not") and the suit being over something like "wrongful death" rather than 1st degree intentional homicide he might be found liable for something and end up having to pay damages. The second shooting seems like the best bet of the three.
 
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crimson5pheonix

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You're doing that thing where you're ignoring what the law actually says in favor of the public policy goal it's supposed to work towards or a summary of the law from staff working for a handful of legislators. Those things do not supersede what the law actually says - this is literally why I brought up the Nebraska "safe haven" law, to point out that no matter what the broader goal is, the law says what it says and those words are what is to be interpreted.
And I pointed out this wasn't a problem until this very specific case where the judge very clearly ruled in an extremely underhanded manner. Clearly the precedent was in place until now, the judge is out of line.
 

Dwarvenhobble

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Disagree.
Imagine a person breaks into a house. The owner of the house attacks them, so the burglar pulls out a gun and shoots. Shouldn't have been there, definitely not self-defense.
Take it back a step: imagine it's trespassing on a farm, and the farmer comes out and points a shotgun at them, so the trespasser shoots them. Shouldn't have been there, definitely not self-defense.
Take it back a step: imagine there's a curfew and someone goes out to riot and brings their gun. While rioting, someone tries to beat them with a skateboard, so they shoot the attacker dead. Shouldn't have been there, definitely not self-defense.

I guarantee you agree with at least the first one above. I don't believe that you think the circumstances are irrelevant in principle, I think you just find his particular circumstances agreeable, and I really don't think you should. All the stuff about being a medic and doing first aid and protecting property does not change the fact that he broke curfew to attend a riot. He wasn't destroying things himself, but his presence still contributed to the violence (before the shooting) because that's how riots work. It's not that black rights activists and sports fans are exceptionally violent; violent people are violent, and any crowd at night is sufficient cover set things on fire and likely get away with it. If you go to a place where rioting is happening, particularly when the police have explicitly told people to stay home, you are a rioter. If you carry a gun, you are a rioter with a gun. Should a rioter with a gun get to claim self-defense if someone tries to fight them while rioting? I don't think so.
Well Kyle started out on private property (the lot)

Also the argument being put forward was the dead were either in the right or justified to attack Kyle because (and this was the prosecutions main claim in the end which IMO they didn't even prove happened) that Kyle pointed his gun at Rosenbaum first as that totally made Rosenbaum's actions justified from that point on as Kyle totally incited him to action and not because Rosenbaum was a nutter with a history of violence who wanted to hurt people and so apparently the 17 year old is to blame for the 30 something year old Rosenbaum's actions.

Hell based on Wisconsin law and Castle Doctrine if it's a trespasser who you believe poses a threat you can shoot them on the spot pretty much if it's on your property.

Violence would have happened with or without Kyle, precedent shows that and the whole "He shouldn't have been there". The best response I can think of to that is "He shouldn't have needed to be there or felt the need to be there and wouldn't have done if people weren't losing their shit and actually managed to hold an actual protest and not have it deteriorate into a riot. Other protests have been shown to actually be good and when radical elements joined in to try and attack the police, the protestors tackled the people and passed them to police lines to be arrested because they realise it was better for their protest to not have such tools trying to start stuff.
 

Dreiko

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Didn't he already get offered a job by Matt Gaetz as a political internship?
I saw an interview from some relative saying he's going to study nursing in college. Maybe he really was a medic. Whoda thunk it.
 
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Dwarvenhobble

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Was that before jury or not? I couldn't live with myself letting a murderer go away in this kind of situation...


"After the jury departed, Rittenhouse attorney Mark Richards told the judge he feared such a move would lead to jurors looking things up in the dictionary or doing their own research at home."

So apparently both sides lawyer aren't exactly the brightest bulb. Can't possibly have the jury think over their decision and get informed on the law involved in the case they're asked to decide.
The issue is they're not allowed to try and be influenced by outside factors in the case. So no looking and news coverage of claims online only what they saw in court because if you believe the internet Kyle was a KKK member who went on a Rampage and murdered 5 unarmed black guys who were just standing about doing nothing at all.

This works both ways BTW because the Jury were specifically kept in the dark about the criminal histories of the people Kyle shot which BTW would include the fact one was a violent wife beater and Rosenbaum had 5+ write ups in prison for starting brawls with other inmates with little to no provocation. Which yeh could totally sway some-one to go "Rosenbaum has a history of being a violent nut job so in all likelihood did start the situation and was trying to attack Kyle because Rosenbaum has a history of doing just that with other people".
 
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Dreiko

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The issue is they're not allowed to try and be influenced by outside factors in the case. So no looking and news coverage of claims online only what they saw in court because if you believe the internet Kyle was a KKK member who went on a Rampage and murdered 5 unarmed black guys who were just standing about doing nothing at all.

This works both ways BTW because the Jury were specifically kept in the dark about the criminal histories of the people Kyle shot which BTW would include the fact one was a violent wife beater and Rosenbaum had 5+ write ups in prison for starting brawls with other inmates with little to no provocation. Which yeh could totally sway some-one to go "Rosenbaum has a history of being a violent nut job so in all likelihood did start the situation and was trying to attack Kyle because Rosenbaum has a history of doing just that with other people".
Wasn't he in prison cause he was a child rapist too? Never mind the prison brawls, that they even hid this is huge.
 
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Gergar12

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He was acquitted on ALL FUCKING charges. Not even manslaughter?!?!?
 

CriticalGaming

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Ugh, yeah. While this is the verdict I believe is correct, I'm not looking forward to the agrandesement of Rittenhouse either, not the crowing of victory.
Yet all over Twitter (which isn't all that surprising) people are calling this a victory for racism and talking about how broken the system is. I think it was the right choice as well, based on every piece of evidence presented and the self-defense laws in play here.

A system didn't decide this. A jury did. The jury could have just as easily convicted him despite all the evidence proving his innocence, but they didn't because people don't work that way.
 
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Dreiko

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He was acquitted on ALL FUCKING charges. Not even manslaughter?!?!?
Based on the lady reading the thing it didn't sound like he was even up for that, only murder.
 

meiam

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The issue is they're not allowed to try and be influenced by outside factors in the case. So no looking and news coverage of claims online only what they saw in court because if you believe the internet Kyle was a KKK member who went on a Rampage and murdered 5 unarmed black guys who were just standing about doing nothing at all.

This works both ways BTW because the Jury were specifically kept in the dark about the criminal histories of the people Kyle shot which BTW would include the fact one was a violent wife beater and Rosenbaum had 5+ write ups in prison for starting brawls with other inmates with little to no provocation. Which yeh could totally sway some-one to go "Rosenbaum has a history of being a violent nut job so in all likelihood did start the situation and was trying to attack Kyle because Rosenbaum has a history of doing just that with other people".
He said this in responce to the jury asking for written instruction from the judge. This wasn't outside factor, that was literally just the instruction (which were 36 pages when typed).

And the victim record are irrelevant because Kyle didn't know them when he shoot.
 
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