Kyle Rittenhouse, who’s charged with killing two men during a 2020 protest in Wisconsin, took the stand on Wednesday.
At one point, per the Associated Press, Rittenhouse started to cry, prompting the judge to order a pause in testimony.
“I was asking people if they needed medical help as I was getting down there,” Rittenhouse said around 51 minutes into the video below. From there, he claimed to have heard someone scream “Burn in hell!” while at the Kenosha protest, which had been spurred by police shooting Jacob Blake in the back.
“[Joseph Rosenbaum] was now running from my right side, um, and I was cornered from in front of me with [Joshua Ziminski] and there were, there were three people right there,” Rittenhouse said. And at this point, he started to cry, prompting the pause.
Elsewhere, Rittenhouse alleged that Rosenbaum threatened to kill him and called him “the N-word.” Rittenhouse—who was 17 at the time—ultimately shot and killed Rosenbaum and another man by the name of Anthony Huber. Gaige Grosskreutz was injured by Rittenhouse, who had brought an AR-style rifle with him to the protest.
Later into Rittenhouse’s time on the stand on Wednesday, he was asked by the prosecution about his desire to own the rifle he used in the shootings. “I thought it looked cool, but, no,” Rittenhouse, whose friend bought the gun for him, said when asked if there was any other reason he selected the AR-15 style aside from not being able to lawfully possess a pistol.
Rittenhouse, a former member of a police cadet program, has argued that his actions were carried out in self-defense. “I didn’t intend to kill them, I intended to stop the people who were attacking me,” he said Wednesday.
The handling of Rittenhouse’s killings has received widespread criticism, particularly in comparison to the repeated instances of violence being perpetrated against people of color, often at the hands of law enforcement.
In August of last year, for example, Rittenhouse’s actions were mentioned by ACLU of Louisiana executive director Alanah Odoms Hebert when addressing how law enforcement officials treated Jace Boyd, who admitted to fatally shooting a Black panhandler outside of a Trader Joe’s.
“While Black men like Jacob Blake are shot in the back for threats that are merely perceived, white men like Kyle Rittenhouse and Jace Boyd can gun people down in the street and still be treated with dignity and respect by law enforcement,” Hebert said at the time.





