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Post Reports

Kyle Rittenhouse on trial

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 9 November 2021

⏱️ ? minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The homicide trial of Kyle Rittenhouse pits claims of self-defense against accusations of vigilantism. Plus, in the next installment in our series on teens in America: Why it can be especially hard for Black immigrant families to talk about racism.  


Read more:


The homicide trial of Kyle Rittenhouse – the teenager who killed two people and injured a third during a protest over the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis. – continues this week. Kim Bellware reports on the evidence brought by both sides, and why the trial likely won’t end with a high-profile conviction


“We have a small set of facts that everybody agrees on,” Bellware says. But while the prosecution is arguing this was first-degree intentional homicide, “The other side is saying, ‘Yes, he did kill these people. He did shoot. But he was doing it to protect himself.’ ”


And later in the show, we hear from 16-year-old Obse Abebe, a teen reporter with YR Media for the latest installment of our series on Teens in America


Obse was born in Ethiopia but moved to the United States when she was three. Being Ethiopian and living in America meant that Obse had to come to terms with being Black in America. 


“Not to say that the topic of race is hush-hush in our family,” Obse said. “But it is difficult to approach when your parents are very passionate about you feeling connected to both their culture from their mother country and the culture that you are currently in.”


A Washington Post-Ipsos poll found that nearly three-quarters of teens in America say they’ve talked to a parent about race in the past year. More than half say they’ve had a similar conversation with a close friend. As part of The Post’s Teens in America series, we’re listening in on what those conversations sound like. 


For more in this series, visit wapo.st/teens.


If you value the journalism you hear in this podcast, please subscribe to The Washington Post. We have a deal for our listeners one year of unlimited access to everything the Post publishes online for just $29. To sign up, go to washingtonpost.com/subscribe.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Kyle Rittenhouse is an 18-year-old from Antioch, Illinois originally.

0:06.3

He came into the national consciousness because on August 25, 2020, he went to Kenosha, Wisconsin,

0:13.0

to respond to protests that were happening following a police shooting in that city.

0:18.9

Kim Belware is a national reporter for the post-based in Chicago.

0:22.6

While he was there, he shot three people, killing two of them, and is now on trial where

0:28.1

he faces charges of intentional homicide and reckless homicide as well as an unlawful

0:33.4

weapons charge.

0:34.4

On August 25, the last year at the city of Kenosha in this county, the defendant recklessly

0:42.1

caused the death of Joseph D. Rosenbaum under circumstances which show utter disregard

0:48.1

for human life.

0:49.5

It's really touched on so many of the issues that have just been in the national discourse

0:55.6

for the past several years.

0:57.7

It involves the justified nature of protests, protests against police, protests in support

1:06.4

of racial justice.

1:07.9

It draws into question different attitudes about, you know, is property damage and destruction

1:13.9

ever justified as part of protests?

1:16.7

It brings in questions about gun rights, gun ownership, and also disparate treatment

1:23.4

of white versus black individuals by police.

1:27.1

This now, the question is, how all of those things will affect whether or not Kyle Rittenhouse

1:32.4

is found guilty?

1:36.7

From the newsroom of the Washington Post, this is Post Reports.

1:40.1

I'm Martine Powers.

...

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