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Witness at Rittenhouse trial says victim lunged at teen

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A video cameraman testifying at the prosecution trial of Kyle Rittenhouse said he saw Joseph Rosenbaum, who Rittenhouse shot and killed, lunge at the teenager’s rifle just before he fired. The moment was not caught on video. The Associated Press has the story:

Prosecution witness at Rittenhouse trial gives testimony helpful to the teen

KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) — The first man shot by Kyle Rittenhouse on the streets of Kenosha during a night of turbulent protests seemed to “lunge” toward Rittenhouse’s rifle just before Rittenhouse fired, a video cameraman testified Thursday.

Richie McGinniss, a video director for the conservative website The Daily Caller, described watching as Joseph Rosenbaum chased Rittenhouse and caught up to him in one of the most crucial and disputed aspects of the case. It is one of the few moments not clearly documented on video.

Prosecutor Thomas Binger repeatedly pressed McGinniss — a prosecution witness — about whether Rosenbaum was actually falling when he was shot, as McGinniss said in a media interview days after the shooting.

But McGinniss said: “He was he was lunging, falling. I would use those as synonymous terms in this situation because basically, you know, he threw his momentum towards the weapon. And when the weapon wasn’t there, his momentum was continuing.”

“And that’s the point at which he fired,” McGinniss said, referring to Rittenhouse.

McGinniss also testified that when Rosenbaum “lunged,” Rittenhouse “kind of dodged around” and then leveled his gun and fired.

Rittenhouse, 18, is charged with shooting three men, two of them fatally, starting with Rosenbaum, in the summer of 2020. The aspiring police officer, then 17, had gone to Kenosha with an assault-style rifle and a medical kit in what he said was an effort to safeguard property from violent protests that broke out over the police shooting of a Black man.

Prosecutors have portrayed Rittenhouse as the instigator of the bloodshed, while his lawyer has argued that he acted in self-defense, suggesting among other things that Rittenhouse had reason to fear that his weapon would be taken away and used against him.

The defense also has said that a shot fired by someone in the crowd just seconds before Rittenhouse began shooting made Rittenhouse believe he was under attack.

Kenosha Detective Martin Howard testified Thursday that video footage shows that a protester, Joshua Ziminski, had fired the first shot into the air. Howard said he used a stopwatch and timed five or six videos to determine that 2.5 seconds later, Rittenhouse began firing at Rosenbaum.

A wealth of video has been played in court that captured the tumultuous demonstration and the series of shootings.

The defense has suggested that Rittenhouse was the victim of a “classic ambush” from Rosenbaum, who according to testimony came out from behind a car to meet Rittenhouse and chased his down as Rittenhouse shouted, “Friendly! Friendly! Friendly!”

Rosenbaum, according to police testimony, was unarmed.

Moments after shooting Rosenbaum, Rittenhouse shot and killed Anthony Huber, 26, a protester from Silver Lake, Wisconsin, who was seen on bystander video hitting Rittenhouse with a skateboard.

Rittenhouse then wounded Gaige Grosskreutz, 27, a protester from West Allis, Wisconsin, who had a gun in his hand as he stepped toward Rittenhouse.

Before testimony resumed Thursday, the judge dismissed a juror who had made a joke to a court security officer about the police shooting of Jacob Blake — the Black man whose wounding triggered the Kenosha protests. The juror, a retired man, declined to repeat the joke for the judge.

“It is clear that the appearance of bias is present and it would seriously undermine the outcome of the case,” Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder said.

Prosecutors on Thursday also replayed widely seen video of the interview that The Daily Caller did with Rittenhouse before the shooting.

It began with Rittenhouse in front of a boarded-up building, where he said he and other men were there “to protect this business, and part of my job is there’s somebody hurt, I’m running into harm’s way.” He also said he was there to provide medical aid.

McGinniss testified that he also went to talk to four Black people in the crowd who seemed angry. He said one of them had two rocks or brick-like stones in his hands, and another had a rock and a strap.

McGinniss said he asked them why they were mad, and they said that they were jumping on vehicles and that Rittenhouse came up to them with his gun. One member of the group accused Rittenhouse of waving his gun around as if he were in a movie, the witness said.

Rittenhouse, who is white, could get life in prison if convicted in the politically and racially polarizing case that has stirred furious debate over self-defense, vigilantism, the right to bear arms and the racial unrest that erupted around the U.S. after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and other cases like it.


By AMY FORLITI, TAMMY WEBBER and MICHAEL TARM

Forliti reported from Minneapolis; Webber reported from Fenton, Michigan. Associated Press writer Scott Bauer contributed from Madison, Wisconsin.

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