Kyle Rittenhouse Legal Proceedings - Come for the trial, stay for….

What do you think will happen?

  • Guilty on all charges

    Votes: 282 8.8%
  • Full Acquittal

    Votes: 1,077 33.7%
  • Mistral

    Votes: 264 8.3%
  • Mixture of verdicts

    Votes: 479 15.0%
  • Minecraft

    Votes: 213 6.7%
  • Roblox

    Votes: 132 4.1%
  • Runescape

    Votes: 203 6.3%
  • Somehow Guilty Of Two Mutually Exclusive Actions

    Votes: 514 16.1%
  • KYLE WILL SUBMIT TO BBC

    Votes: 35 1.1%

  • Total voters
    3,199
  • Poll closed .
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This guy is going to be good for Kyle he's being very guarded with what he says to the prosecutor.
He sounds a lot like the Gravy Seal, he's acting like he's giving a patrol report to an asshole butterbar* trying to flex. Very guarded and precise.

*Butterbar refers to the insignia for the lowest rank of commissioned officer. They tend to be smug, know-it-all, clueless pricks that try to project authority way too hard over the soldiers under their first command.
 
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@Spectre_06 is it typicsl jarhead training to download a 30-round AR mag to 28? I know why you would do it, i just don't know if its normal crayon eater practice.
Don't ping that faggot.

Shitty cheap ar mags sometimes work better if you underload them slightly, otherwise they can fail to feed
 
One thing is sure, the Kyle Rittenhouse trial give us some advices about how to not hold a trial.

The Kyle Rittenhouse trial is a master class in how not to prosecute a case​

By Andrea Widburg

On August 25, 2020, 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, armed with an AR-15 and a medical kit, went to Kenosha, Wisconsin to offer first aid and protect businesses against looting and arson. By evening's end, Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber were dead, and Gaige Grosskreutz had a hole in his arm. Rittenhouse is now being tried for murder, although he claims — and video evidence and witness testimony confirm — he acted in self-defense.
The trial started this week, and it's been sufficiently fascinating, thanks to mismanaged evidence (including FBI wrongdoing) and an incompetent prosecutor, to merit a short review. These are some highlights. Andrew Branca's superb posts at Legal Insurrection have more details.
On Tuesday, assistant D.A. Thomas Binger committed a fundamental error: he misrepresented the evidence, almost all of which is captured on film. Thus, he asserted that Kyle shot "unarmed" victims. In fact, Grosskreutz was aiming a gun at Kyle when Kyle shot him; Huber was trying to beat Kyle to death, or decapitate him, with a skateboard; and Rosenbaum was trying to steal Kyle's gun.
Also on Tuesday, news broke that the FBI had failed to share evidence with the defense and then "lost" some of that same evidence. Although the testimony wasn't televised, Branca writes:
I did learn later that apparently the FBI had possessed both the low resolution aerial video shared with prosecutors, and a high-definition version of the same video. To the outrage of the defense, however, it was discovered today that the high resolution version of the video had been "lost" by the agency.
Reportedly even Judge Schroeder was left aghast at the possibility that the FBI had tossed away evidence relevant to a homicide case, but beyond that I don't have any substantive knowledge of how all this played out.
Wednesday's most interesting story also involved mishandled evidence. Rittenhouse made available to the prosecution the contents of his cell phone. He had nothing to hide.
Things were different went it came to Gaige Grosskreutz's phone. Grosskreutz was the man who simultaneously stuck a gun and his phone, with the camera working, into Kyle's face when Kyle shot his arm.
Police investigators obtained a search warrant for Grosskreutz's phone, which would certainly have contained material evidence. Bizarrely, though, the police did not serve the warrant, did not seize his phone, and never tried to gain access to the contents.
The very young detective in charge of the case conceded that this was the only time in his experience at the Kenosha P.D. that the police did not serve a search warrant for a phone download. The reason given was "Marcy's Law," which protects victims of crimes from invasive investigations. So Grosskreutz, who stuck a gun in Kyle's face, was framed as a "victim" from day one. However, the detective admitted that, in his experience, the police had never before used Marcy's Law to prevent a search warrant for cell phone evidence. The police also didn't record their interview with Grosskreutz, another anomaly in a department that recorded everyone's interviews.

Thursday — day three of the trial — proved particularly fascinating because it was like a master class on how not to question your own witnesses. The two witnesses were Richard McGinnis, a videographer for The Daily Caller, and Ryan Balch, a former Army infantryman who patrolled the area with Rittenhouse.
The prosecution's job was to get these two men to prove affirmatively that Rittenhouse wasn't acting in self-defense. This would mean showing that he was not the wronged innocent in all this, or that he was not in imminent danger, or that his actions were out of proportion to the threat, or that he was not acting reasonably at the time.
What happened, instead, was that the prosecution's insistent questioning regarding the circumstances of Rosenbaum's death revealed that Kyle was an amiable young man who avoided confrontations and was actively trying to help people; that Rosenbaum threatened to kill him; and that he was desperately trying to run away from Rosenbaum, only to find himself trapped in a dead end, at which point Rosenbaum (who, again, had threatened to kill him) tried to grab Kyle's weapon.

In other words, the prosecution's witnesses proved every element of self-defense: Kyle wasn't the aggressor; Rosenbaum was an imminent threat; Kyle's actions were therefore proportionate to the threat; and, having first tried to escape the threat, Kyle acted reasonably in defending himself.
Branca's description of the testimony shows ADA Binger violating every rule of holes. Not only did he fail to stop digging, but he also kept digging faster and more desperately.
No matter how bad the prosecution is, Rittenhouse is nowhere near out of the woods. Being a defendant in a murder case is inherently risky, for there's no telling what a jury will do. He has the good fortune, though, to have an honest and thoughtful judge, exculpatory video evidence, and a strangely inept prosecution. With luck, soon Kyle will be able to put this behind him and get on with his life.
 
Guy doesn't seem very sharp, probably shouldn't use terms like "A-hole" in court.
That's usually a fine level of censorship. I think the judge might be on edge after starting with the nigger word.

I'm in the dentist office and forgot my headphones. Is Mr. Marine making a heal turn?
 
He sounds a lot like the Gravy Seal, he's acting like he's giving a patrol report to an asshole butterbar* trying to flex. Very guarded and precise.

*Butterbar refers to the insignia for the lowest rank of commissioned officer. They tend to be smug, know-it-all, clueless pricks that try to project authority way too hard over the soldiers under their first command.

when they say cs gas canister do they mean the grenade or the spray? do these guys have charges pending?

i don't see how they'll throw Kyle under the bus knowing they're going to be next in line.

That's usually a fine level of censorship. I think the judge might be on edge after starting with the nigger word.

I'm in the dentist office and forgot my headphones. Is Mr. Marine making a heal turn?

not yet, the prosecutor is being guarded with his questions, and the marine is giving just the basic answers.
 
training day my nigga.jpg
my explicit term
 
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