Advertisement

Wisconsin prosecutors seek to re-arrest protest shooter Kyle Rittenhouse on higher bail

Kyle Rittenhouse in a booking photo.
Kyle Rittenhouse in a police booking photo taken in Antioch, Ill.
(Antioch Police Department)
Share via

Prosecutors asked a judge Wednesday for a new arrest warrant for an Illinois teen charged with shooting three people, killing two of them, during a Wisconsin protest over police brutality, after he apparently violated his bail conditions.

Kyle Rittenhouse failed to inform the court of his change of address within 48 hours of moving, Kenosha County prosecutors alleged in a motion filed with Judge Bruce Schroeder. The motion asks Schroeder to issue an arrest warrant and increase Rittenhouse’s bail by $200,000.

Rittenhouse’s attorney Mark Richards countered in his own motion Wednesday that death threats had driven Rittenhouse into an “undisclosed Safe House.” Richards said he offered to give prosecutors the new address in November if they would keep it secret, but they refused. He said Rittenhouse had stayed in constant contact with him.

Advertisement

Rittenhouse is charged with multiple counts, including homicide, in connection with protests in August in Kenosha. The demonstrations began after a white police officer shot Jacob Blake, who is Black, in the back during a domestic disturbance, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down.

Prosecutors allege Rittenhouse, who was 17 at the time, responded to a militia’s call on social media to protect Kenosha businesses from protesters. Video shows him opening fire with an assault-style rifle on Joseph Rosenbaum, Anthony Huber and Gaige Grosskruetz. Rosenbaum and Huber were killed; Grosskruetz was wounded.

Rittenhouse, who is white, fled to his home in Antioch, Ill., but turned himself in to police there the next day.

He has maintained he acted in self-defense after the three men attacked him. Conservatives have rallied around him as a symbol for gun rights and for pushing back against those protesting police brutality, although others say Rittenhouse escalated tensions by walking around the protest while armed.

Supporters raised $2 million to cover his bail, and he walked out of jail in November.

Last month Rittenhouse was seen drinking at a bar in Mount Pleasant, Wis., according to prosecutors, and posing for photos with two men as they made “OK” signs with their hands, a symbol used by white supremacists. Five men at the bar also serenaded Rittenhouse with a song that has become the anthem of the violent and extremist Proud Boys, prosecutors alleged.

Advertisement

Rittenhouse is now 18 but still too young to drink in most circumstances. However, he could consume alcohol in the bar under Wisconsin law because he was with his mother.

The judge ordered him not to have any contact with white supremacists after that episode.

Prosecutors wrote in their motion Wednesday that they learned Rittenhouse was no longer living at his Antioch address after the court mailed him a notice and it was returned as undeliverable on Jan. 28. Kenosha detectives traveled to the address on Tuesday and discovered another man had rented the apartment and had been living there since mid-December.

The prosecutors said in their motion that it’s unusual for any homicide defendant to be allowed to roam freely and that the court needs to know where Rittenhouse is at all times. They did not say whether they knew where Rittenhouse is living, only that he has failed to provide the court with a new address.

“He posted no money so he has no financial stake in the bond,” they wrote. “He is already facing the most serious possible criminal charges and life in prison, so in comparison, potential future criminal penalties are insignificant.”

Richards, his attorney, argued in his motion that Rittenhouse and his family had received threats in various forms, most recently on Jan. 25. When Rittenhouse was released from jail in November, police told defense attorneys not to provide the safe house address, Richards said.

Advertisement

An attorney working with Richards, Corey Chirafisi, asked Assistant Dist. Atty. Thomas Binger via email on Nov. 30 whether he could keep the safe house address sealed but Binger refused, according to Richards’ motion.

“It is noteworthy that the State has only now decided to file a motion to increase bond in this case, despite having corresponded with Attorney Chirafisi regarding the change in Kyle’s residence over two months ago,” Richards wrote.

Richards stressed that Rittenhouse had made all of his court appearances and was in constant contact with him. The lawyer provided the safe house address to the judge as part of a separate motion requesting it be sealed.

Advertisement