Verdict returned in Rittenhouse trial

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Pepe
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08 Dec 2021, 1:25 am

Brictoria wrote:
DW_a_mom wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
DW_a_mom wrote:
In both cases you mentioned, I believe the state statutory law provided specific language addressing the concept of self-defense in sufficient detail to cover the situations under consideration, thus not requiring the proceedings to look beyond the statute and into case law.

State law trumps common law every time. In fact, laws often are written expressly to "fix" (going forward) court decisions legislators weren't happy with.

It is possible for such state laws to be challenged in court as exceeding the state's authority to make its own laws, or as being unconstitutional as drafted (federal statute trumps state statute, and the constitution trumps all), but I'm not aware that any legal experts are arguing that to be true with either of these state laws.


There seems to be a pattern in red states (such as Wisconsin) passing laws that permit open or concealed carry which trumps any existing case laws pertaining to "castling"

It's interesting that under Wisconsin legal for all adults unless they are prohibited from possession of firearms. Wisconsin state law 948.60(2)(a) states: "Any person under 18 years of age who possesses or goes armed with a dangerous weapon is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.

I'm curious why Rittenhouse wasn't even subject to this paltry misdemeanour


If you keep reading the statute, you get to a list of exceptions. They determined one applied. You can never stop looking just because you found a sentence that seems to apply. You always have to search for qualifiers and exceptions. Sometimes they aren’t even in the same law section.


I'm fairly sure I have explained this to Cyberdad at least half a dozen times across multiple threads, and others have similarly done so - As a result, he is (or should be) well aware of those details, and the fact that he pretends to not know this information does lead to the question of why he is so persistant in trying to push deliberate falsehoods about the specific law in question.


He should trust what you say.
I do.
You know your shite and you have a high degree of credibility. 8)
Too sycophantic, or just enough? :scratch: :mrgreen:



Last edited by Pepe on 08 Dec 2021, 5:11 am, edited 1 time in total.

cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 2:06 am

I just want closure on this case.

I don't agree with the interpretation of the law but accept what's done is done.



Brictoria
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08 Dec 2021, 2:20 am

cyberdad wrote:
I just want closure on this case.

I don't agree with the interpretation of the law but accept what's done is done.


I'm curious: What part of the "interpretation" of the law do you disagree with (taking into account the entire statue, as written, and without excluding "inconvenient" portions in order to reach a conclusion)?



DW_a_mom
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08 Dec 2021, 2:22 am

Brictoria wrote:
I'm fairly sure I have explained this to Cyberdad at least half a dozen times across multiple threads, and others have similarly done so - As a result, he is (or should be) well aware of those details, and the fact that he pretends to not know this information does lead to the question of why he is so persistant in trying to push deliberate falsehoods about the specific law in question.


I know. But sometimes a slightly different approach from a different person can make a difference.


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cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 3:03 am

Brictoria wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
I just want closure on this case.

I don't agree with the interpretation of the law but accept what's done is done.


I'm curious: What part of the "interpretation" of the law do you disagree with (taking into account the entire statue, as written, and without excluding "inconvenient" portions in order to reach a conclusion)?


Let's start with the subjective interpretations of the judge Bruce Schroeder.

He's on the record as saying: "This is a long-held opinion of mine, which very few judges, I guess, share with me. I think it's a loaded - the word victim is a loaded, loaded word."

Fine....But then he ruled the men killed or wounded in this case could be called rioters, looters and arsonists if the evidence showed that to be true. To me this is jarring and disparate treatment even if there may be legal justification for it. Those words convey the message to the jury that somehow these people who were shot were deserving, were less worthy of protection of the law. To me that's bias and he should have been removed for it.

Secondly (and critically for the Grosskreutz, Huber and Rosenbaum families) Wisconsin law is almost deliberately vaguely written in the concept of provocation (I already highlighted Castle law). To me this is a key flaw in the way legislatures have written their laws to describe when a person may kill lawfully in self-defense. Wisconsin ironically does place limits on what people can claim as self-defense, Otherwise you would get vigilantes like the McMichaels been freed after they tried the same defense for shooting Ahmed Arbery,

Back to Rittenhouse. He (Rittenhouse) brought an AR-15-style rifle, loaded with 30 rounds of armor-piercing ammunition, to a volatile situation and provoked the violence that ensued. You cannot hide behind self-defense if you provoked the incident. If you created the danger, you forfeit the right to self-defense.”

However the vagueries of the wording of the law make it challenging for a jury to intepret what constitutes provocation. Wisconsin’s provocation instruction is that the limitation on self-defense comes into play only if the defendant engaged in “unlawful conduct of a type likely to provoke others to attack.” Lawful but provocative behavior is apparently within bounds.

If Wisconsin law was clearer on these issues, (namely a person whose words or acts create a reasonable apprehension of imminent physical harm then this should qualify as an initial act of aggression) then the jury’s deliberations in the Rittenhouse case might be much different.



DW_a_mom
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08 Dec 2021, 3:21 am

^^^ I can understand why some of these points are hard to let go of, but they’ve all been gone through, in detail, and the law simply isn’t falling as you think it should. The only thing I will repeat at this point in the conversation is that self-defense is mostly an “in the moment” determination, not one that heavily weighs putting oneself in the wrong place at the wrong time (it does make some changes, but not enough to defeat the facts in this case).

I follow some very progressive lawyers, and while they don’t like verdict, they accept that it was appropriately decided given the law as written, and that the judge was within bounds as well.

I think it’s time for you to let go. You may never understand the result for the simple reason that it feels like the wrong answer, and I get that. I can relate to that feeling, even. But I do believe it was a fair trial and a fair result using the laws in effect. If you haven’t gotten to that conclusion yet, I don’t think anyone in this thread can get you there.


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cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 3:47 am

DW_a_mom wrote:
I think it’s time for you to let go. .


I'm sorry but I feel a little like Nemo's dad bout this. and we don't actually know what the future holds for vigilante action.



cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 4:39 am

Judge Schroeder seems incompetent to me. He apparently didn't allow the drone image of Rittenhouse pointing his gun at the crowd because he doesn't "trust technology" (he showed the court how his friends send him pictures on his phone and he doesn't know how to open them) and therefore he doesn't know how to use "zoom" on an image so he deemed it inadmissable. That's pretty pathetic,

The whole point of a trial is to garner all available information. The judge seems to have used his own opinion to make a lot material inadmissable including recordings of Rittenhouse talking about shooting protestors.



Pepe
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08 Dec 2021, 5:17 am

cyberdad wrote:
DW_a_mom wrote:
I think it’s time for you to let go. .


I'm sorry but I feel a little like Nemo's dad bout this. and we don't actually know what the future holds for vigilante action.



Admit it.
You just like the attention. :mrgreen:

Where are your other partisan mates, btw? :scratch:



Pepe
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08 Dec 2021, 5:24 am

cyberdad wrote:
Judge Schroeder seems incompetent to me. He apparently didn't allow the drone image of Rittenhouse pointing his gun at the crowd because he doesn't "trust technology" (he showed the court how his friends send him pictures on his phone and he doesn't know how to open them) and therefore he doesn't know how to use "zoom" on an image so he deemed it inadmissable. That's pretty pathetic,

The whole point of a trial is to garner all available information. The judge seems to have used his own opinion to make a lot material inadmissable including recordings of Rittenhouse talking about shooting protestors.


Will *nothing* stop him? 8O
He is like a god darn Terminator!
Quick, someone find a foundry! :mrgreen:

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Brictoria
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08 Dec 2021, 7:10 am

cyberdad wrote:
Brictoria wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
I just want closure on this case.

I don't agree with the interpretation of the law but accept what's done is done.


I'm curious: What part of the "interpretation" of the law do you disagree with (taking into account the entire statue, as written, and without excluding "inconvenient" portions in order to reach a conclusion)?


Let's start with the subjective interpretations of the judge Bruce Schroeder.

He's on the record as saying: "This is a long-held opinion of mine, which very few judges, I guess, share with me. I think it's a loaded - the word victim is a loaded, loaded word."

Fine....But then he ruled the men killed or wounded in this case could be called rioters, looters and arsonists if the evidence showed that to be true. To me this is jarring and disparate treatment even if there may be legal justification for it. Those words convey the message to the jury that somehow these people who were shot were deserving, were less worthy of protection of the law. To me that's bias and he should have been removed for it.


The reason behind this would be connected to the fact that the term "victim" is "loaded" (much like "vigilante" or "murdered"), putting certain assumptions on those described as such, and the fact that the case was to determine if the people shot were the "victims" of his actions, or whether he was the "victim" of their attacks - The jury came to the later conclusion.

Similarly, the use of the other terms ("rioters", "arsonists", etc.) was permitted only so long as it had been evidenced that this was the way the individuals had been acting, not as an open door to make unfounded assertions\accusations.

cyberdad wrote:
Secondly (and critically for the Grosskreutz, Huber and Rosenbaum families) Wisconsin law is almost deliberately vaguely written in the concept of provocation (I already highlighted Castle law). To me this is a key flaw in the way legislatures have written their laws to describe when a person may kill lawfully in self-defense. Wisconsin ironically does place limits on what people can claim as self-defense, Otherwise you would get vigilantes like the McMichaels been freed after they tried the same defense for shooting Ahmed Arbery,


Up until 2005 Victoria had similar provocation laws, and NSW still does. The legal term "provocation" has very specific meaning, as opposed to the general term used (below is from jury instructions in NSW regarding "provocation" - replaced by "extreme provocation" in 2014):
Quote:
How then do you determine whether [the accused] was (or may have been) provoked to do what [he/she] did?

The law provides that an [act/omission] causing death is an act [done/omitted] under provocation where —

1. The [act/omission] is the result of a loss of self-control on the part of [the accused] that was induced by any conduct of [the deceased] (including grossly insulting words or gestures) towards or affecting [the accused]; and
2. That conduct of [the deceased] was such that it could have induced an ordinary person in the position of [the accused] to have so far lost self-control as to have formed an intent to kill, or to inflict grievous bodily harm upon, [the deceased], whether the conduct of [the deceased] occurred immediately before the [act/omission] causing death, or at any previous time.

Source: https://www.judcom.nsw.gov.au/publications/benchbks/criminal/provocation.html (most jurisdictions use something similar to this as a legal definition for provocation)

The mere fact of a person carrying a rifle where open-carry of such an item was legal, would not come close to meeting such a standard (pointing a rifle at someone, as the prosecution tried to introduce at the last minute, could have such a potential, but there was no real evidence of such act being presented, instead relying on a magnified image and the viewer's imagination).

cyberdad wrote:
Back to Rittenhouse. He (Rittenhouse) brought an AR-15-style rifle, loaded with 30 rounds of armor-piercing ammunition, to a volatile situation and provoked the violence that ensued. You cannot hide behind self-defense if you provoked the incident. If you created the danger, you forfeit the right to self-defense.”


First note: it was FMJ, not AP rounds he had in the rifle.
Second note: the mere possession of a firearm, regardless of ammunition type is not a provocative action under the law (see above).

cyberdad wrote:
However the vagueries of the wording of the law make it challenging for a jury to intepret what constitutes provocation. Wisconsin’s provocation instruction is that the limitation on self-defense comes into play only if the defendant engaged in “unlawful conduct of a type likely to provoke others to attack.” Lawful but provocative behavior is apparently within bounds.


You seem to have confused the dictionary term "provocation" with the legal definition.

In order for provocation to be proven, it requires "conduct of [the person who caused the provocation] was such that it could have induced an ordinary person in the position of [the person being provoked] to have so far lost self-control as to have formed an intent to kill, or to inflict grievous bodily harm upon" the person who caused the provocation.

cyberdad wrote:
If Wisconsin law was clearer on these issues, (namely a person whose words or acts create a reasonable apprehension of imminent physical harm then this should qualify as an initial act of aggression) then the jury’s deliberations in the Rittenhouse case might be much different.


This was a state where "open carry" was legal and there were multiple people carrying rifles in such a way with whom Mr Rosenbaum (and possibly the others) had interacted with earlier without incident - given Mr Rosenbaum's earlier actions around a group of such people, it would be hard for anyone to believe that his seeing a single individual carrying a slung rifle walk past where he were standing could in any way put him in "reasonable apprehension of imminent physical harm".

Off Topic
Had Mr Rosenbaum's use of the "n" word towards a group of the people with rifles that evening, along with his aggressive actions at the same time, been aimed at a group of "black" people, rather than what appeared to be predominantly "white" people, it is quite possible that those people would have a reasonable defence of "provocation" should they have reacted to him.



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08 Dec 2021, 1:45 pm

I'm watching the trial, and one thing I have a question about it is, how come none of the detectives in the case seem to be cross examined on the stand?

You have several civilians that are, but no police detectives in the case. Was the prosecutor trying to avoid putting them on the stand because they felt it would bring their case down in anyway? Or did I just miss them when trying to find all the parts of the trial online?



cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 3:53 pm

ironpony wrote:
I'm watching the trial, and one thing I have a question about it is, how come none of the detectives in the case seem to be cross examined on the stand?

You have several civilians that are, but no police detectives in the case. Was the prosecutor trying to avoid putting them on the stand because they felt it would bring their case down in anyway? Or did I just miss them when trying to find all the parts of the trial online?


I am not sure I can't remember why a number of people were not called as witnesses. For example the girlfriends of Huber and Rosenbaum.



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08 Dec 2021, 3:59 pm

Well as for Rosenbaum it seemed he was suicidal because he got out of prison recently, and was yelling at other people to kill him, according to witnesses there. The prosecution wanted to protray Rosenbaum as a hero, since they kept saying he was a hero in the closing argument. So could it be, that they didn't call his gf because they didn't want the gf to confirm that he was suicidal and therefore out to try to attack someone to provoke them into killing him? In other words his gf would make him look less heroic if they put her on the stand?



Last edited by ironpony on 08 Dec 2021, 4:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.

cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 4:03 pm

Brictoria wrote:
This was a state where "open carry" was legal and there were multiple people carrying rifles in such a way with whom Mr Rosenbaum (and possibly the others) had interacted with earlier without incident - given Mr Rosenbaum's earlier actions around a group of such people, it would be hard for anyone to believe that his seeing a single individual carrying a slung rifle walk past where he were standing could in any way put him in "reasonable apprehension of imminent physical harm".


I agree these points make the outcome plausible given there is sufficient doubt for the jury. Particularly since judge Schroeder wasn't interested in entertaining the drone footage.

On your last point relating to Rosenbaum using the n-word and interacting with the crowd, I don't recall Rittenhouse being present at that juncture so how could he have ascertained Rosenbaum's aggression at that point? I thought the pair interacted when Rittenhouse claimed to put out a dumpster fire started by Rosenbaum.



cyberdad
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08 Dec 2021, 4:07 pm

ironpony wrote:
Well as for Rosenbaum it seemed he was suicidal because he got out of prison recently, and was yelling at other people to kill him, according to witnesses there. The prosecution wanted to protray Rosenbaum as a hero, since they kept saying he was a hero in the closing argument. So could it be, that they didn't call his gf because they didn't want the gf to confirm that he was suicidal and therefore out to try to attack someone to provoke them into killing him?


I think there's sufficient evidence to suggest Rosenbaum was not in his right state of mind. Huber and Grosskreutz did intend to disarm Rittenhouse,

After Grosskreutz the crowd dispersed and nobody confronted Kyle. It's interesting to know what was going on in the minds of people who saw Grosskreutz get shot and why nobody pursued Kyle after that.?