So a minor in Wisconsin was legally in open carry possession of a semi-automatic rifle? Wisconsin sucks!
Not just that...but the curfew violation was also dropped and his pointing the gun in a video at someone has been disallowed from zooming in (sort of--I am confused on this) and so it seems like all claims of self-defense will become valid because any that were invalid due to committing a crime can't be invalid since all crimes are dismissed or risk of having committed them has been mitigated by minimizing evidence.
His claim to self defense was never invalidated by having been committing those crimes. But I guess the point is moot now that they've been dropped.
There was more than one claim of self-defense and not all of them were equally valid or invalid, but all of them are nuanced and some of them are dependent upon whether one is committing a crime to a certain extent:
"
939.48(2) (2) Provocation affects the privilege of self-defense as follows:
939.48(2)(a) (a) A person who engages in unlawful conduct of a type likely to provoke others to attack him or her and thereby does provoke an attack is not entitled to claim the privilege of self-defense against such attack, except when the attack which ensues is of a type causing the person engaging in the unlawful conduct to reasonably believe that he or she is in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm. In such a case, the person engaging in the unlawful conduct is privileged to act in self-defense, but the person is not privileged to resort to the use of force intended or likely to cause death to the person's assailant unless the person reasonably believes he or she has exhausted every other reasonable means to escape from or otherwise avoid death or great bodily harm at the hands of his or her assailant."
Right, although in that particular case it is referring to illegal behavior that provokes.
Such as pointing at someone with an illegally obtained weapon during a curfew you are not supposed to be out in?
Well, therein lies the rub. The prosecution’s entire theory rests on his pointing the gun at Ziminski just before Rosenbaum chases him. But remember, they must prove that is what happened beyond a reasonable doubt. So what’s the evidence of that? Rittenhouse sure as hell didn’t admit it. It’s all based on a grainy video that the prosecution enhanced. Even then the judge admitted he couldn’t determine if it showed what they purport. Here’s the still.
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There’s a couple of problems with this picture. One, Rittenhouse is not left handed As this shot would seem to imply. He’s a right handed shooter. Second, the white blob above the arrow is supposed to be Rittenhouse’s right hand on the weapon, but the white blob is there before Rittenhouse ever shows up. here’s a screenshot from a split second before Rittenhouse shows up.
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The same white blob can be seen to the left of the pole before he walks to that point. This is part of a vehicle that is parked there. it can’t be his hand. And thus this picture does not depict Rittenhouse pointing a rifle at anyone. It’s just way too unclear what this is. It’s got to be beyond a reasonable doubt.
there are other problems as well. Supposedly Zaminski is the one targeted. But Zaminski admits he was armed and had fired a shot in the air. Zaminski doesn’t go after Rittenhouse, Rosenbaum did. And Zaminski denies knowing Rosenbaum.
The whole thing is insane. You’ve got a kid with a weapon, another guy with a handgun, and a third guy whose made violent threats before and just been released after a suicide attempt. IMHO, they’re all a bunch of losers. Rittenhouse is no hero. Now he’ll have to live with the consequences of his stupid decision to go down there. But in the end he gets off on self defense.
I was not discussing the implications of evidence but instead the structure of law. Various claims of self-defense regarding each criminal charge are dependent upon a lot of things, including in this case whether or not his actions were illegal which plays into it in a nuanced way. The jury looks at evidence and makes decisions. My point was that at each turn, the judge has been removing the things that structurally apply to the prosecution's case prior to a jury evaluating the charges and evidence. My other point that I've been making for pages is to argue for a reasonable middle ground of reckless endangerment and NOT murder, and so I do not want to be in a position of trying to argue against self-defense wholesale in all instances of all things. If you look at my exchanges with the particular poster, I'd ask that you put those things in that initial context--i.e., I am discussing the judge's bias to remove elements from the prosecutor's case, even though I do not necessarily (I don't actually) agree with the extent and intensity of the prosecutor's case.
That said, I am noticing a common trend of an error being made by persons on the Internet referring to the prosecutor's evidence. They are tending to show video or stills of videos or stills. They then look at the qualities of the videos of videos or stills of stills and claim those qualities are applicable to the original evidence. So, for example, they take a snapshot of the judge, prosecutor, and defense lawyer in the courtroom in front of the video in question and ask skeptically, "how can anyone see that?"
View attachment 36095
... but the thing that they are displaying and looking at is a video of a video where the outside frame is some 4 times less resolution (twice the height and twice the length) than the video inside the video. And that's a minimum because we don't know the actual resolution of the most internal image applicable. Again, I am not arguing for a definite conclusion that the evidence proves beyond a shadow of a doubt anything--that's not my point--but instead that the opposition in this case as trending on the Internet has some flaws in this regard.
So, here is a second example of this sort of trend:
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At this point, when you look at your screen, your screen is an image and within that I have put an image that is of another image containing an image, and blah blah blah such nesting of images: image [of an image]
n . The claim from this right-wing
site defending Rittenhouse is that the image is blurry, but it's the image of the image that is blurry that they have put on display. You can tell because of the words that are blurry but that wouldn't be blurry to an observer of the actual evidence.
I am not claiming that all their arguments are invalid, but it's difficult to trust the rest of their analysis if I cannot trust the source of the images they are using. I remain agnostic on some of these points but that also doesn't mean I think that is the position a jury ought to come to when analyzing the evidence since they would have the actual evidence and be best suited to examining and thinking about it in total...assuming they had all such things to begin with and could make choices.