Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager charged with killing two people during protests that followed the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Wisconsin last summer, retained a new attorney prior to his first in-person court hearing Friday.
Rittenhouse, dressed in a dark-colored suit and wearing a black mask, said nothing during Friday morning’s hearing in Kenosha. Covid-19 protocols forced Rittenhouse to make his earlier court appearances virtually but those restrictions have since been lifted.
Also on Friday, Rittenhouse retained Corey Chirafisi, a defense attorney based in Madison to serve as co-counsel, attorney Mark Richards, who was already representing Rittenhouse, said.
“The government has two, and we wanted it to be fair,” Richards told NBC News on Friday.
Richards and Chirafisi and attorneys for the prosecution discussed pretrial deadlines for jury questionnaires and disclosure of defense witnesses during Friday’s pretrial hearing.
Rittenhouse is due to be back in court on Sept. 17. A trial date is still set for Nov. 1, and is expected to last about two weeks.
Rittenhouse, who is white, is accused of traveling to Kenosha from his home in Antioch, Illinois, on Aug. 25 after a local militia posted an online message seeking help protecting businesses from protesters.
Kenosha was in the throes of several nights of chaotic protests after a white police officer shot Blake, who is Black, in the back during a domestic disturbance. The shooting left Blake paralyzed from the waist down.
Rittenhouse, who was 17 at the time, opened fire on protesters Joseph Rosenbaum, Anthony Huber and Gaige Grosskreutz with an AR-15-style rifle. Rosenbaum and Huber were killed. Grosskreutz was wounded but survived.
Rittenhouse maintains he was defending himself, and conservatives have rallied around him, painting him as a symbol for gun rights. They generated $2 million for his bail last November.
Richards has said in court documents that Rittenhouse and his family have moved into an undisclosed safe house because they’ve received multiple threats.
The Associated Press contributed.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com