this ship is sinking like the Titanic for the prosecution.
Rittenhouse murder case thrown into jeopardy by mistrial bid
https://news.yahoo.com/defense-witne...045819592.html
MICHAEL TARM, SCOTT BAUER and KATHLEEN FOODY
Tue, November 9, 2021, 10:58 PM·5 min read
KENOSHA,  Wis. (AP) — The murder case against Kyle Rittenhouse was thrown into  jeopardy Wednesday when his lawyers asked for a mistrial over what  appeared to be out-of-bounds questions asked of Rittenhouse by the chief  prosecutor. The judge did not immediately rule on the request.
The  startling turn came after Rittenhouse, in a high-stakes gamble, took  the stand and testified that he was under attack when he shot three men,  two fatally, during a night of turbulent protests against racial  injustice in Kenosha in the summer of 2020.
“I didn’t do anything wrong. I defended myself,” the 18-year-old said.
During  cross-examination, prosecutor Thomas Binger asked Rittenhouse about  whether it was appropriate to use deadly force to protect property. The  prosecutor also posed questions about Rittenhouse’s silence after his  arrest.
At that, the jury was ushered out of the room, and Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder  loudly and angrily accused Binger of pursuing an improper line of  questioning and trying to introduce testimony that the judge earlier  said he was inclined to prohibit.
Rittenhouse lawyer Corey  Chirafasi all but suggested prosecutors might be deliberately trying to  cause a mistrial because this one is “going badly” for the prosecution  and it wants a do-over. The defense asked for a mistrial with prejudice,  meaning that if one is granted, Rittenhouse cannot be retried.
When Binger said he had been acting in good faith, the judge replied: “I don't believe that.”
Rittenhouse is on trial for the shootings he committed during sometimes-violent protests 
that erupted  in Kenosha over the wounding of a Black man by a 
white Kenosha police officer.  He could get life in prison if convicted of the most serious charges against him.
Rittenhouse,  who was 17 at the time, went to Kenosha with an AR-style semi-automatic  weapon and a medic bag in what the former police youth cadet said was  an attempt to protect property after rioters had set fires and ransacked  businesses on previous nights.
He testified that he fatally shot  Joseph Rosenbaum after Rosenbaum chased him and put his hand on the  barrel of Rittenhouse's rifle. He said he then shot and killed Anthony  Huber after Huber struck him in the neck with his skateboard and grabbed  his gun.
When a third man, Gaige Grosskreutz, “lunges at me with  his pistol pointed directly at my head,” Rittenhouse shot him, too,  wounding him.
“I didn’t intend to kill them. 
 I intended to stop the people who were attacking me," Rittenhouse said.
During  his turn as a witness, Rittenhouse sobbed so hard at one point that the  judge declared a break. But otherwise, he was composed on the stand,  even as he was being cross-examined aggressively.
The case against  Rittenhouse has divided Americans over whether he was a patriot taking a  stand against lawlessness or a vigilante. Prosecutors have portrayed  him as the instigator that night, while the defense has said he feared  for his life, afraid that his gun was going to be taken away and used  against him.
Rittenhouse’s decision to testify carried certain  risk — including the possibility of fierce cross-examination from  prosecutors — and came despite doubts among some legal experts about the  value of putting him on the stand, given the apparent weaknesses in the  state's case.
Some of the prosecution's own witnesses bolstered the young man’s claim of self-defense.
As  he began crying on the stand and appeared unable to speak, his mother,  Wendy Rittenhouse, on a bench across the courtroom, sobbed loudly.  Someone next to her put an arm around her. After the judge called a  recess, jurors walked by Rittenhouse and looked on as he continued to  cry.
Much of the testimony Wednesday was centered on the first  shooting of the night, since it was Rosenbaum's death that set in motion  that bloodshed that followed.
Rittenhouse said he was walking  toward a car dealer's lot with a fire extinguisher to put out a blaze  when he heard somebody scream, “Burn in hell!” He said he responded by  saying, "Friendly, friendly, friendly!”
He said Rosenbaum was  running at him from one side and another protester with a gun was in  front of him, “and I was cornered." He said that was when he began to  run. 
He said another protester, Joshua Ziminski, told Rosenbaum, “Get  him and kill him.”
Rittenhouse said he heard a gunshot directly  behind him, and as he turned around, Rosenbaum was coming at him with  his arms out in front. “I remember his hand on the barrel of my gun,"  Rittenhouse said.
“I shoot him," the defendant recounted. He also  said he thought the object Rosenbaum threw during the chase — a plastic  hospital bag — was a chain he had seen Rosenbaum carrying earlier.
Rittenhouse  said he intended to help the wounded man but was in shock as someone  else attended to him. Rittenhouse said he thought the “safest option”  was to turn himself in to police who were nearby.
Asked by his  lawyer why he didn’t keep running away from Rosenbaum, Rittenhouse said:  “There was no space for me to continue to run to.”
Rittenhouse  said that earlier that night, Rosenbaum was holding a chain and had  twice threatened to kill him. Apologizing to the court for his language,  Rittenhouse quoted Rosenbaum as saying: “I’m going to cut your  (expletive) hearts out!"
there is video of Rosenbaum threatening rittenhouse and others to their faces earlier that night.
As he first took the stand, Rittenhouse  was asked by his attorney whether he came to Kenosha looking for  trouble, and he responded no.
He testified that he saw videos of  violence in downtown Kenosha on the day before the shootings, including a  brick being thrown at a police officer's head and cars burning in a Car  Source dealership lot.
Rittenhouse said the Car Source owner “was happy we were there” that night.
___
This  story has been corrected to show that it was the defense attorney, not  the judge, who suggested the prosecutor was trying to cause a mistrial.