Fox News to interview Kyle Rittenhouse amid
protests over not guilty verdict
Sit-down with Tucker Carlson, one of Fox’s most
extreme hosts, is likely to cement Rittenhouse’s popularity among conservatives
Lauren
Aratani
Sat 20 Nov
2021 15.33 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/nov/20/fox-news-tucker-carlson-interview-kyle-rittenhouse
Kyle
Rittenhouse, the teenager acquitted of murdering two men during anti-racism
protests, is set to appear next week on Fox News’s Tucker Carlson show amid
fears that the not guilty verdict in the Kenosha killings might encourage
militia violence.
Rittenhouse’s
shooting of three people, including two he killed, during demonstrations in the
Wisconsin city split the US. For some it made him a vigilante out to make
trouble while for others he was a gun-toting hero defending property from a
mob.
Rittenhouse
become a heroic figure for conservatives during his trial as many rightwing
figures raised money for his legal defense. His coming interview by Carlson –
one of Fox’s most controversial and extreme hosts – is likely to cement that
popularity. The Monday night sit down is already being heavily promoted by the
conservative channel.
Carlson has
risen to prominence as the most influential media figure for conservatives,
even amid numerous controversies.
Carlson has
advocated for multiple baseless conspiracy theories on his show and been
condemned for dog-whistling racism. The Fox News host is releasing a series
that argues that the 6 January Capitol insurrection was orchestrated by leftist
Antifa group. He has also bemoaned the Democratic party for trying to “replace
the current electorate” with “voters from the third world” through immigration
policies: what is known as the “great replacement theory” that has originated
in the far right.
The Fox
News host appears to not only have interviewed Rittenhouse for the show, but
has also filmed a short documentary on Rittenhouse during his trial. A clip of
Rittenhouse in the backseat of a car, seemingly right after his not guilty
verdict, was previewed on Carlson’s show Friday night.
“The jury
reached the correct verdict. Self defense is not illegal,” Rittenhouse says in
the clip.
Mark
Richards, an attorney for Rittenhouse, told CNN’s Chris Cuomo that a Fox film
crew was embedded with the defense team for the duration of the trial, which
Richards did not approve of. “I threw them out of the room several times,”
Richards said. “I don’t think a film crew is appropriate for something like
this.”
Richards
told Cuomo that the people who fundraised for Rittenhouse’s defense were
“trying to raise money” and that Rittenhouse’s family and his advisers approved
of the film crew being there during the trial.
In the
aftermath of the Rittenhouse verdict and the success of his self-defense
argument, some experts have raised concerns that Rittenhouse’s verdict will
empower extremist movements and provoke violence in the name of vigilantism.
“It has
never taken more than a whisper of approval to fan the flames of militant right
action, and the Kenosha acquittal is a shout,” wrote Kathleen Belew, a
historian who studies the white power movement, on Twitter.
Jeri
Bonavia, executive director of the Wave Educational Fund, an organization in
Wisconsin that aims to prevent gun violence, told NBC News that the trial is
“feeding this idea that individual citizens need to be out there, not as part
of a functioning society, but as these rogue dispensers of justice”.
Hours after
Rittenhouse’s not guilty verdict was delivered, US attorney general Merrick
Garland spoke at the swearing in of Manhattan’s new US attorney and emphasized
the role the justice department plays in protecting civil rights, noting the
department’s history in combating the Ku Klux Klan and protecting voting
rights.
At the
ceremony, Damian Williams, who is the first Black top federal law enforcement
official overseeing the southern district of New York, one of the country’s
most powerful federal courts, said that he’s establishing a civil rights unit
in his office’s criminal division to concentrate greater resources on problems
worsening in “troubled times”.
“White
supremacist groups are on the march. Antisemitism is on the march. Anti-Asian
violence is on the march. Abuse of the most vulnerable in our society is on the
march, and that includes, by the way, abuse of incarcerated women and men who
lose their liberty but not their right to be kept safe,” Williams said.
Patches of
protests were seen in cities across the country on Friday in response to the
Rittenhouse verdict.
The
protests, including one outside of the courthouse in Kenosha, were largely
peaceful. Protests in Portland, where far-right groups have clashed with
leftwing activists, were declared a riot last night after demonstrators started
to break windows and throw objects at police.
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