Unrest in Portland as Kyle Rittenhouse verdict
divides US
Police declare a riot in Oregon’s largest city as
observers condemn discrepancy in how law enforcement treats militia supporters
and anti-racism protesters
Gloria
Oladipo
@gaoladipo
Sat 20 Nov
2021 06.10 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/nov/19/kyle-rittenhouse-verdict-reaction-conservatives
About 200
protesters in Portland, Oregon, broke windows and threw objects at police on
Friday night as reaction poured in after a jury cleared Kyle Rittenhouse over
the shooting deaths of two people at an anti-racism protest in Kenosha,
Wisconsin, last year.
Sheriffs in
the city declared a riot downtown after “violent, destructive behavior by a
significant part of the crowd”, with reports some talked about burning down the
Justice Center.
Police used
loudspeakers to ask the crowd to disperse or face the use of force, including
“pepper spray and impact weapons”. By 11pm the crowd had broken up and largely
dispersed.
In Kenosha,
shouting matches flared on the courthouse steps between supporters of opposing
sides, embodying the wildly different lenses through which a divided America
viewed the case.
Protest
marches were also held in Chicago and New York.
With
reaction pouring in from both sides of the political divide, the Rittenhouse
case has split the nation, with many pointing out the discrepancy between the
law enforcement’s treatment of the armed white militia supporter and
anti-racism protesters.
Rittenhouse
has become a cause célèbre for many conservatives, who have raised money for
his legal team. He had traveled to Kenosha from Illinois amid disturbances in
the city after a white police officer shot Jacob Blake, who is Black, in the
back.
After the
announcement that Rittenhouse had been acquitted on all charges, politicians and
public figures shared their views on the verdict via social media.
“The
verdict in the #KyleRittenhouse case is a travesty and fails to deliver justice
on behalf of those who lost their lives as they peacefully assembled to protest
against police brutality and violence,” tweeted the NAACP.
Bernice
King, a minister and daughter of Martin Luther King Jr, said on Twitter:
“Justice is not just about verdicts. It is a continuum. We can galvanize around
changing our culture, including challenging the difference in how a Black male
teen would have been engaged in Kenosha.”
Joe Biden,
addressing reporters on Friday, said that he “stands by” the jury’s decision.
“I stand by
what the jury has concluded. The jury system works,” said Biden before
answering questions related to his health following a colonoscopy he had
earlier in the day.
In a later
statement the US president appealed for calm and said: “While the verdict in
Kenosha will leave many Americans feeling angry and concerned, myself included,
we must acknowledge that the jury has spoken. I ran on a promise to bring
Americans together, because I believe that what unites us is far greater than
what divides us.”
The
Missouri representative Cori Bush commented on the verdict via Twitter, saying
she was “hurt”, “angry”, and “heartbroken”.
“It’s white
supremacy in action. This system isn’t built to hold white supremacists
accountable. It’s why Black and brown folks are brutalized and put in cages
while white supremacist murderers walk free,” tweeted Bush.
Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez strongly condemned the Rittenhouse acquittal, writing
on Twitter: “What we are witnessing is a system functioning as designed and
protecting those it was designed for.
“My heart
still breaks for the communities and families whose grief now compounds, and
the countless others who will be denied and deprived in similar scenes across
the country,” she wrote.
The
governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker, also weighed in, saying: “Carrying a loaded
gun into a community 20 miles from your home and shooting unarmed citizens is
fundamentally wrong.
“Twenty-six-year-old
Anthony Huber and 36-year-old Joseph Rosenbaum, a father, had their whole lives
ahead of them. They deserve to be alive today. They deserve justice,” Pritzker
wrote in a statement. “We must do better than this.”
Many conservative
politicians have celebrated the acquittal of Rittenhouse, who many on the right
sought to portray as someone who stood up to rioters.
“Rittenhouse
-- NOT GUILTY!” tweeted the Texas governor, Greg Abbott, shortly after the
verdict was announced.
The
Wisconsin senator Ron Johnson tweeted: “I believe justice has been served in
the Kyle Rittenhouse trial. I hope everyone can accept the verdict, remain
peaceful, and let the community of Kenosha heal and rebuild.”
Representative
Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina also commented on the verdict, tweeting out,
“NOT GUILTY” and offering Rittenhouse a congressional internship.
“You have a
right to defend yourself. Be armed, be dangerous, and be moral,” said Cawthorn
on Instagram following the decision.
Donald
Trump, meanwhile, “congratulated” Rittenhouse on the verdict. The former
president put out a brief statement that read: “If that’s not self-defense,
nothing is!”
Rittenhouse
killed Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, and Anthony Huber, 26, and wounded Gaige
Grosskreutz, 27, when he shot them with an assault rifle as he roamed the
streets of Kenosha with other self-described militia during protests in August
2020.
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