Hawktawk wrote:Once again a political spectacle surrounding protests and death. The judge is absolutely in the bag for the defense to the point of being ridiculous. The prosecutor is a fool. My guess the kid will get a hung jury at worst or walk. Get ready for more shootings at protests by armed civilians then.
Seeing the video etc its clearly a case of a young man overwhelmed and immature killing 2 people and wounding one, shooting each multiple times with a weapon of war. The right will see him as a cult figure and hero no matter what happens. The left will see him as a cold blooded murderer no matter what happens. The truth is he is neither a martyr or a cold blooded murderer. He and his victims the prosecution was not able to describe as such but allowed the defense to call them rioters and looters are all collateral damage of the insanity, the lunacy of a nation coming apart at the seams.
Hawktawk wrote:As I already said the judge is so biased it’s laughable . He disallowed referring to 2 dead men as victims but allowed referring to 2 dead men as rioters and looters . He disallowed introduction of evidence that 15 days before the shooting rittenhouse had watched footage of looters entering a store and stated that if he had a gun he would “ take some shots at them”. The Judge screamed literally at the prosecution for suggesting this should be introduced as evidence to show frame of mind , also pointing out that this was Rittenhouse telling his story for the first time . On Veterans Day the judge asked veterans to stand and be honored . There was one vet in attendance , a witness for the prosecution . Later in the day he made a bizarre quip about not wanting any more “Asian food”. The guy is a right wing kook doing everything in his power to get the kid acquitted or at least get him off the most serious charges . I think activist judges will be more and more common .
c_hawkbob wrote:"A little biased"? This judge is comically biased! The worst I can remember seeing, ever.
RiverDog wrote:IMO Rittenhouse isn't going to walk. They'll get him on something. There's too much video evidence of him firing his assault weapon when he wasn't being threatened. It's extremely difficult to argue that an assault weapon is used for self defense. The mere fact that he had brought a fully loaded AR with him is enough evidence of intent to either kill or inflict grave bodily damage.
The defense has put Rittenhouse on the witness stand. A confident defense lawyer never puts their client on the witness stand as it runs the risk of them saying something self incriminating. It's their Hail Mary, hoping that their client will appear human and evoke a sense of sympathy from the jury, that he's not the monster the prosecution is making him out to be. His testimony has already proved to be very damaging. Rittenhouse has lied on the witness stand several times. Here's some snippets of his testimony:
"If I would've let Mr. Rosenbaum take my firearm from me, he would've used it and killed me with it and probably killed more people," Rittenhouse said. Thomas Binger, the prosecutor, questioned why he felt threatened when Rosenbaum did not physically touch his body.
Flustered and on the verge of tears, Rittenhouse claimed, "He could have ran away instead of trying to take my gun from me. It didn't stop him."
The prosecutor wanted to understand why Rittenhouse wanted to scare Rosenbaum: "You felt you were about to die... That's what you wanted him to feel."
"'No!" Rittenhouse exclaimed. "I pointed the gun at him so he would stop chasing me."
"I didn't want to have to kill Mr. Rosenbaum," Rittenhouse said. When asked why he continued firing after the first shot, he said, "I continued to shoot until he was no longer a threat to me."
The state then showed a video of Rittenhouse falsely telling the crowd that Rosenbaum had a gun. On the stand, he admitted that Rosenbaum was not armed.
That's pretty damning testimony. He claims that he didn't want to kill Rosenbaum so he continued to shoot until he was no longer a threat even though he admitted to knowing that he was unarmed?
https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/ky ... testimony/
Aseahawkfan wrote:Once most people start shooting, they don't stop usually unless they're a highly trained and disciplined soldier like Spec Ops. I wouldn't even consider an average soldier trained to stop once they start. Shooting is something people do when they're scared and in a highly emotional state, then they don't stop until they regain emotional control and feel unthreatened. It's why cops don't usually shoot once and are done. They shoot until they can regain control of their emotions because is shooting someone is a trained response in an emotionally charged situation where they feel threatened within the course of their duty. Usually only career criminals who kill as part of their profession or trained spec ops soldiers train to control their emotions on a consistent enough basis to stop firing and confirm a kill in a controlled fashion. So firing a lot isn't really relevant to the discussion of a threat as it is easy to prove once someone who isn't well-trained starts firing their weapon, they won't usually stop quickly. With semiauto weapons able to fire off so many rounds within the span of a few seconds, lack of emotional control is easy to prove which is why how many times you fired is rarely relevant in shooting cases unless you can prove the person was trained on a consistent enough basis to control his emotions once the firing starts and fear and adrenaline are maximum levels.
This is a weird case. Judge is obviously biased towards the defendant. Maybe he just wants to make sure this kid gets a fair trial given the mainstream liberal press is obviously biased against this kid and has turned their viewers against this kid in a big way. Same as anyone using a weapon to protect their rights and property is pilloried by the liberal press regardless of the circumstances. Same as the liberal press often sides against the police, while Fox news sides with the police in almost every shooting, especially if it is racial.
Kind of hard not to find bias in these cases, especially when they are so heavily pushed on a national level. Generically speaking and completely unaware of actual polls, it seems like half the country wants this kid punished and half the country wants him exonerated.
That whole time was a crazy time. This kid got caught up in the insanity and went way overboard. Now he's a lightning rod for both sides pushing their agenda.
I think he should likely do some time. If he doesn't have some serious criminal past, I would give him a lighter sentence myself with psychological monitoring. It was an insane time in the country and lots of people over the past few years have done lots of insane things. I think it should be taken into account for sentencing and correction. You don't want to toss people away in the garbage that are not truly terrible citizens, but at the same time you don't want this kind of behavior repeated. So you have to send a clear message this isn't acceptable while at the same time not completely tossing people in the trash forever due to the circumstances of the last few years and all the insanity this nation has experienced.
Hawktawk wrote:The kid planned out a little night at the riots imo, stashed a gun, what's more fun on a Friday night? Then it went horribly wrong. As I see it the first guy described as an idiot by prosecution witnesses got a darwin award. You reach for the barrel of an AR held by a inexperience punk kid thats what you get. IMO the next 2 were trying to subdue and active shooter and had they not been in the middle of a riot might have been called heros. Bottom line. Rittenhouse is no hero. he's not a victim. He and the 2 dead and 1 wounded are collateral damage in a nation gone utterly mad with everyone in their corners. The kid is a polititcal football.
RiverDog wrote:Yeah, he had to drive 30 miles to get to the protest. He obviously was looking for trouble, and he found it. Outside of the fact that he was just 17 years old, I don't have a lot of sympathy for him.
But the victims weren't as pure as the wind driven snow, either, and it's given the far right a credible argument in Rittenhouse's defense. Rosenbaum was a registered sex offender convicted of sexually abusing, including sodomizing, boys from 9-11 years old, was out on bond for a domestic abuse battery accusation, and was caught on video acting aggressively earlier that night. Huber was a felon convicted in a strangulation case who was recently accused of domestic abuse. Grosskreutz was convicted of a crime for use of a firearm while intoxicated, was under a court order not to posses a firearm, and was armed with a handgun when shot. They, too, had intentionally put themselves in harm's way, so it's difficult for me to shed tears for them, either.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Is this really true? If so, killing Rosenbaum was justice from up on high. Sodomizing 9-11 year old boys? What is some scumbag like that doing on the streets?
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I don't think Rittenhouse warrants a homicide conviction. Not sure what else they'll get him on with the gun charge dropped, but, regardless of his intentions, it was irresponsible for him and anyone else to show up with firearms. This one showed it doesn't take much for things to go sideways.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Yes, regardless of his intentions. Coming to a situation like that armed with any kind of weapon does not automatically equate to lethal intent; if that's your stance, then every person there who was armed, including many protesters, some with pistols, are culpable for what happened.
If were to take a 2x4 or a skateboard like Huber and swing it at somebody's head, I've made offensive use of a weapon. If I'm standing around with said 2x4, and someone nearby says to themselves "That could hurt me.", have I created a hazard? If they dislike it enough and feel threatened, can they chase me, and if they try to take it, can I hit them with it? Rosenbaum could have just as easily chose not to chase Rittenhouse but did so. Rosenbaum chose; Rittenhouse's assault rifle did not force him to do so.
You know this, but many things can be turned into weapons, and there use can be offensive and defensive depending on the situation. Yes, an assault rifle is called such because it allows for heavier firepower on the move, but it can just as easily be used in a defensive role. I don't like that these weapons or any weapon were brought to the situation. I believe that Rittenhouse and others like him there armed with assault rifles had the intent to act as a deterrent to protesters and to protect themselves if necessary. A "better to have and not need it, than need it and not have it" situation. Good idea? No. Should there be some kind of reckoning for that decision? Yes. Does it equate to homicidal intent? No. Not in my book.
I don't think we're going to see eye to eye on this, and that's okay. I'm anxious to see the verdict. This, and the Arbery case (though I think it is more damning for those men since they aggressively pursued and unarmed person), both hinge what you and the prosecutor in the Rittenhouse case are positing. That merely bringing a firearm to a situation is enough to be culpable for shooting and the outcome of that shooting.
c_hawkbob wrote:He was underage and across state lines which makes him having shot these people during the commission of a crime. Self defense is not applicable during the commission of a crime. He got himself an AR and went hunting rioters. He deserves to do his time, but unlike you Riv, I don't think he will. There will be someone on this jury that will hold out from any major conviction. He'll do minimal time, if any at all.
Just showing up armed even with an AR is not indicative of intention to hunt
Just showing up armed even with an AR is not indicative of intention to hunt
c_hawkbob wrote:And there is where we disagree. At the very least showing up armed with an AR is intent to bully and intimidate, not just to counter protest.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Not missing your point, gentlemen, but I disagree with it. Had a response prepared but opted to delete it. Bottom line is I don’t think it was a good idea for anyone to show up possessing any weapon of any kind on either side. These situations are tense enough without them. I’ll leave the adjudication to the adjudicators.
RiverDog wrote:For example, yes, at age 19, Rosenbaum was sentenced to prison for sexually abusing five children — all boys between the ages of 9 and 11 — in Arizona’s Pima County in early 2002, according to his case file obtained via a public records request by Snopes.
The documents said Rosenbaum was temporarily living with the boys’ parents after his mother had kicked him out for disobeying her rules about one month earlier. Over the course of his weeks-long stay, Rosenbaum molested the boys, showed them porn, and performed oral sex on them, among other offenses, the documents showed. He was sentenced to prison for roughly 15 years, and authorities believed at the time “his risk to recidivate being of great concern to the community” considering the victims’ gender and age. (Let us note here: The records included an interview with Rosenbaum in which he said his stepfather sexually abused him and his brother on an almost daily basis when he was a preteen.)
https://www.snopes.com/news/2020/09/11/ ... s-records/
Like I said, I have zero sympathy to Rittenhouse's victims. But that shouldn't make any difference in his guilt or innocence.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Yes, regardless of his intentions. Coming to a situation like that armed with any kind of weapon does not automatically equate to lethal intent; if that's your stance, then every person there who was armed, including many protesters, some with pistols, are culpable for what happened.
If were to take a 2x4 or a skateboard like Huber and swing it at somebody's head, I've made offensive use of a weapon. If I'm standing around with said 2x4, and someone nearby says to themselves "That could hurt me.", have I created a hazard? If they dislike it enough and feel threatened, can they chase me, and if they try to take it, can I hit them with it? Rosenbaum could have just as easily chose not to chase Rittenhouse but did so. Rosenbaum chose; Rittenhouse's assault rifle did not force him to do so.
You know this, but many things can be turned into weapons, and there use can be offensive and defensive depending on the situation. Yes, an assault rifle is called such because it allows for heavier firepower on the move, but it can just as easily be used in a defensive role. I don't like that these weapons or any weapon were brought to the situation. I believe that Rittenhouse and others like him there armed with assault rifles had the intent to act as a deterrent to protesters and to protect themselves if necessary. A "better to have and not need it, than need it and not have it" situation. Good idea? No. Should there be some kind of reckoning for that decision? Yes. Does it equate to homicidal intent? No. Not in my book.
I don't think we're going to see eye to eye on this, and that's okay. I'm anxious to see the verdict. This, and the Arbery case (though I think it is more damning for those men since they aggressively pursued and unarmed person), both hinge what you and the prosecutor in the Rittenhouse case are positing. That merely bringing a firearm to a situation is enough to be culpable for shooting and the outcome of that shooting.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:That’s why I say it is more damning to the shooters in the Arbery case, but I think it will still come down to whether or not the jury will think they had a right to shoot once Arbery tried to take the gun or that they are liable for introducing the lethal weapon into the situation that resulted in Arbery’s death due to their aggressive pursuit of him.
Hawktawk wrote:There was evidence of Rittenhouse having made statements about taking shots at rioters he had seen on TV. It occurred 15 days before the shootings . It was not allowed by the judge . There’s plenty of evidence this was an aggressive kid who stashed a gun he couldn’t legally purchase and deliberately drove to a riot to pack it around . Of the likely hundreds if not thousands of weapons in the hands of citizens one was fired 7 times taking 2 lives and injuring a third person . As I analyze what happened it’s clear why kids can’t join the military till they are 18. He panicked in the same chaotic environment many others didn’t . The first victim absolutely was self defense . After that it’s what is called the fog of war . Nobody will ever know what the guy with the skateboard was thinking but the one with no bicep said he was dealing with an active shooter . If those guys had stayed home they would be alive but the same is true if rittenhouse had stayed home .
RiverDog wrote:The jury is entering its 2nd day of deliberations. As a rule, a long deliberation is good news for the defense. Quick decisions by the jury usually result in a guilty verdict.
I still don't know more people aren't questioning the support of these two scumbag parties who have showed their pathetic scumbag willingness to overlook terrible behavior to gain power over the last few years. You would think intelligent people would seek to reshape the political environment given how both these parties showed a willingness to sell this country out to maintain power. But nope, they both want to continue on with the vulgar idiocy.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:And it was my understanding the defense objected to receiving a compressed video pre trial that was of poorer quality than the one shown at trial. I watched the prosecution and all the videos they showed, but I don t recall anything about shooting towards protesters prior to Rosenbaum.
curmudgeon wrote:I still don't know more people aren't questioning the support of these two scumbag parties who have showed their pathetic scumbag willingness to overlook terrible behavior to gain power over the last few years. You would think intelligent people would seek to reshape the political environment given how both these parties showed a willingness to sell this country out to maintain power. But nope, they both want to continue on with the vulgar idiocy.
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