The Kyle Rittenhouse trial could be ruled as a mistrial by Kenosha County Circuit Court Judge Bruce Schroeder at any time.
Some legal experts say that’s abnormal, especially since the case is already being deliberated by a jury. But another said it's typical, and Schroeder himself has defended the decision.
Rittenhouse's defense says some of the issues should result in a mistrial with no chance for a retrial, while one could give prosecutors the option to try Rittenhouse again.
He shot and killed Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, and Anthony Huber, 26, and wounded Gaige Grosskreutz, now 28, during unrest in Kenosha in August 2020. Rittenhouse says he acted in self-defense. He could get life in prison if convicted of the most serious charge against him.
Terry Rose, a Kenosha attorney with 54 years of experience, who’s also a County Board supervisor, said in a Wednesday afternoon phone interview that usually judges rule on motions for a mistrial “right then and there.” Instead, in this case, Schroeder has taken two motions for a mistrial “under advisement” and may rule on them later.
As such, it’s possible for the jury to come back with a guilty verdict, and then Schroeder can decide to throw the verdict out.
Rose called Schroeder’s decision to wait “problematic.”
“I’m not sure why the judge has waited to rule,” Michael O’Hear, professor of criminal law at Marquette Law School, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel earlier this week. “It seems unlikely to me that he would have turned the case over to the jury if he expected to grant the mistrial.”
Schroeder on Wednesday commented in court about criticism that he had yet to rule on the earlier mistrial request.
“Why anyone would think it’s odd for the judge to sit on a motion to dismiss, I have no idea," he said.
The judge said he hadn't had a chance to read the motion because he had just received it and wanted to give the state a chance to weigh in.
“I’m somewhat astounded,” he continued. “As I spoke about on the first day of trial, the result of the trial should be open to public scrutiny, people should have confidence in the outcome of the trial … and it’s just a shame that irresponsible statements are being made.”
Mike Lawlor, an associate professor of criminal justice at the University of New Haven in Connecticut, who previously has been both a prosecutor and a defense attorney, said “it’s not unusual” and sometimes it’s wise for a judge to put off the decision.
It’s impossible to know and understand every law a state has. As such, Lawlor said, judges delaying a decision can give themselves time to read up on the related case law before making a final decision.
“If you declare a mistrial, it means all this is down the drain,” Lawlor said.
Of the defense’s attempts to get a mistrial, Lawlor said, “Keep in mind a defense attorney’s obligation is to do everything he or she can think of to avoid the conviction.”
As such, it costs the defense nothing to try and get a mistrial, even if the chance of one being declared is slim.
The motions
The attorneys defending Rittenhouse have sought a mistrial twice since the trial began Nov. 1.
Last week, Rittenhouse’s attorneys called for a mistrial with prejudice after they accused prosecutors of misconduct when Assistant District Attorney Thomas Binger tried questioning Rittenhouse on the stand about how the teenager hadn’t spoken out much publicly since his arrest. Under the Fifth Amendment, a suspect’s right to remain silent is heavily protected.
A mistrial with prejudice would mean that prosecutors could not try the case again.
At the time, Schroeder admonished Binger, telling the prosecutor, “You’re right on the borderline” of “a grave constitutional violation for you to talk about the defendant’s silence.”
On Wednesday, defense attorneys again called for a mistrial, arguing that they received an inferior copy of a key video — drone footage that captured the first shooting — from prosecutors and would have approached things differently if they had received the higher quality video earlier.
Defense attorney Corey Chirafisi made an oral request for a mistrial without prejudice, telling the judge that if the defense needs a “level, fair playing field, we have to ask for it, and I’m asking for it.”
1/2Motion for mistrial: I will attach screen shots of the motion. It includes ALL the reasons the defense is requesting a mistrial including:
-Binger questioning Rittenhouse's pretrial silence
Assistant District Attorney James Kraus referred the lower video quality provided to defense attorneys as “a technological glitch” and argued that shouldn’t be grounds for a mistrial. Prosecutors also noted the jury saw the highest quality version of the video during the trial, and it was played without objection.
“I do not believe ... an unknown technical incident should result in a mistrial,” Kraus said.
Rose thinks both of those motions could be sufficient grounds for a mistrial.
Of the video quality issue, Rose said, “I think that’s an intentional discovery violation.” And of the line of questioning Binger attempted to pursue last week, that was a “clear violation of pretrial order,” Rose said.
In both motions for a mistrial, Schroeder did not immediately make a ruling.
Setting up an appeal?
Several local attorneys said they believed it would be unlikely Schroeder would grant a mistrial while the jury is deliberating. But in making their motions, the defense is setting up issues for appeal in the event Rittenhouse is convicted of any or all of the charges against him.
Madison-based criminal defense attorney Chris Van Wagner said Schroeder has several options. Van Wagner was hired as as criminal defense attorney for Rittenhouse shortly after he was charged, but he dropped out of the case before Rittenhouse contested extradition to Wisconsin.
Schroeder can deny the request and “then let the case proceed to verdict. If he does that and a guilty verdict is entered, a post-conviction lawyer can come in and file a motion for a new trial based upon the same error and claim that the law required a mistrial,” Van Wagner said.
“Second, the judge can reserve on the motion and not rule on it until the case concludes with either a verdict, a combination of verdicts, or even a mistrial due to a hung jury on one or more counts,” Van Wagner said.
The jury box is empty in the ceremonial courtroom as the jury continued deliberations in private at the Kenosha County Courthouse on Wednesday…
“If the jury returned a verdict of guilty on the Rosenbaum shooting, which appears to be the only count to which this video (the drone video) relates, it is a normal practice of the court to ask each side whether or not they wish to move for judgment on the verdict or verdicts,” Van Wagner continued. “In the case of not guilty, the defense will move for judgment on each not guilty verdict, and they will get it. It has to be granted because of double jeopardy.
“But if there is a guilty verdict returned on the Rosenbaum shooting, (Schroeder) could decide to reserve a ruling on the motion for judgment and then either take off the motion for a mistrial, an unlikely sequence, or request briefing and set a hearing in 30 days on the motion for a mistrial, while holding the motion for judgment on the verdict in abeyance.”
Van Wagner also said the judge could just deny the mistrial entirely if there is a conviction “and let the appellate courts sort it out.”
If the jury finds Rittenhouse not guilty on all charges, the mistrial issue would be moot.
What about a hung jury?
There’s other ways the trial could end in a mistrial. There’s the chance for a hung jury on any or all of the counts, in which no verdict is reached because all 12 jurors can’t come to a consensus on whether the defendant is guilty. If that happens, the Kenosha County District Attorney’s Office could choose to retry the case with a whole new jury.
According to the Fully Informed Jury Association: “If a mistrial occurs due to a hung jury, the prosecutor may decide to retry the case. A judge may decide to disallow this in some cases, but the prosecutor is usually allowed to proceed.”
If the jury comes to a consensus on four counts but not the fifth, the verdict in those four counts would still stand. In the early afternoon Wednesday, jurors asked to review video of the first shooting — the killing of Rosenbaum — indicating that they had yet to come to a consensus, at least on the first charge of first-degree intentional homicide, which bears a sentence of life imprisonment.
“This is a complex case with difficult questions that they have to answer on multiple counts. It is a big job,” Keith Findley, a University of Wisconsin-Madison law professor, told WTMJ-TV on Tuesday.
Those who want to see Rittenhouse convicted that gathered at the courthouse Wednesday repeatedly chanted “No mistrial!” in the afternoon.
The Associated Press contributed.
More than 85 photos from protests and the courtroom on the first day of jury deliberations in Kyle Rittenhouse trial
Steps of the courthouse
Justice for Kyle sign
Sign rip 1
Sign rip 2
A lot of things are going quite well
Kneeling Blake prayer
F--- Kyle shirt male
"Let's Go Brandon" flag Tuesday Kenosha
Kenosha tries to get back to normal: Kids Live Here
McCloskey
Scoops
Kenosha tries to get back to normal
Kenosha tries to get back to normal; Duck Duck Goose Nov. 16
This too shall pass
Courthouse protests
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Courthouse confrontation
Sean McSheffery
Revolution: Nothing Less
Nico Moore
McLemore and McCloskey
Having the world's ear
McCloskeys at protest
Courthouse protestor
McLemore and McCloskey
McCloskeys
McLemore
Arguing their viewpoints
RITTENHOUSE TRIAL
RITTENHOUSE TRIAL
Kenosha County Courthouse - Nov. 16
Kyle Rittenhouse - Nov. 16
RITTENHOUSE TRIAL
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RITTENHOUSE deliberations
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Jury deliberations begin in Rittenhouse case
Kyle Rittenhouse trial
Mark Richards - Nov. 16
Thomas Binger - Nov. 16
JR Hill, the revolutionary drummer
Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
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Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
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Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
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Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
Tuesday, Nov. 16, Rittenhouse trial protests
Flags above the courthouse
Skateboard at the courthouse
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Kenosha Protest Shootings
Reporting from the Associated Press and Deneen Smith of the Kenosha News contributed to this story.
Judge Bruce Schroeder listens as attorneys argue about items that could be considered for a mistrial in the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse at the Kenosha County Courthouse on Wednesday.
The jury box is empty in the ceremonial courtroom as the jury continued deliberations in private at the Kenosha County Courthouse on Wednesday. No verdict was rendered Wednesday, as deliberations will last into at least a third day.