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Kenosha shooter can’t associate with white supremacists, judge says

Kyle Rittenhouse poses for a photo at Pudgy's Pub in Wisconsin
Kyle Rittenhouse poses for a photo at Pudgy’s Pub in Wisconsin on Jan. 5, the day he was arraigned on charges related to the killing of two people at an August protest in Kenosha. The “OK” sign he is flashing is a symbol often used by white supremacists.
(Kenosha County District Attorney’s Office)
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An 18-year-old Illinois man charged with fatally shooting two people during a protest in southeastern Wisconsin last year is prohibited from associating with known white supremacists under a judge’s recently modified bail conditions.

Kyle Rittenhouse was 17 during the Aug. 25 demonstration in Kenosha, Wis., as hundreds protested the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man. Rittenhouse has been charged with multiple counts, including reckless and intentional homicide, endangerment and being a minor in possession of a firearm.

Prosecutors allege Rittenhouse, who is white, left his home in Antioch, Ill., and traveled to Kenosha to answer a call for militia members to protect businesses. Kenosha was in the throes of several nights of chaotic street demonstrations after a white officer shot Blake several times in the back during a domestic disturbance, leaving Blake paralyzed.

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Rittenhouse opened fire with an assault-style rifle during the protest, killing Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber and wounding Gaige Grosskreutz, authorities said. Rittenhouse has pleaded not guilty to all counts and argued that he fired in self-defense. Many conservatives have rallied around him, generating enough money to make his $2-million cash bail.

According to online court records, a Wisconsin judge modified Rittenhouse’s conditions of release Friday to note that Rittenhouse “shall not knowingly have conduct with any person or group of persons known to harm, threaten, harass or menace others on the basis of their race, beliefs on the subject of religion, color, national origin, or gender.”

He is also barred from possessing and consuming alcohol and from having firearms.

Wisconsin prosecutors decline to file criminal charges against the white police officer who shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, in the back last summer.

Jan. 5, 2021

Prosecutors had requested the modifications after Rittenhouse was seen drinking at a bar in the southeastern Wisconsin city of Mount Pleasant, about 25 miles south of Milwaukee, earlier this month. The legal drinking age is 21, but in Wisconsin, Rittenhouse could legally drink alcohol because he was with his mother.

According to WMTV, prosecutors wrote in their request that Rittenhouse also posed for a photo outside Pudgy’s Pub with two men as they made the “OK” sign with their hands, a symbol used by white supremacists. Prosecutors also alleged five men at the tavern serenaded Rittenhouse with a song that has become the anthem of the Proud Boys, a violent neo-fascist group.

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