Teen arrested after two shot dead in protest-hit US city of Kenosha

AFP
A 17-year-old was arrested on murder charges on Wednesday after two people were shot dead during demonstrations against police brutality in the US city of Kenosha.
AFP
Teen arrested after two shot dead in protest-hit US city of Kenosha
AFP

A demonstrator carries a make-shift shield across the street on August 25, 2020, in Kenosha, Wisconsin. 

A 17-year-old was arrested on murder charges on Wednesday after two people were shot dead during demonstrations against police brutality in the US city of Kenosha, as authorities released their first account of the shooting of a black man by an officer that ignited the violence.

Outrage continued to spread after Kenosha, Wisconsin, police shot Jacob Blake multiple times in the back point-blank in front of his children in the Midwestern city last Sunday.

As President Donald Trump vowed to send in federal forces, the NBA canceled all three playoff games on Wednesday after the Milwaukee Bucks — whose home base is just to the north of Kenosha — boycotted their game in protest at Blake's shooting.

"We're tired of the killings and the injustice," Bucks player George Hill was quoted by The Undefeated website as saying.

The boycott also spread to baseball, with the Milwaukee Brewers refusing to play their Major League Baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday, according to US media.

After days of silence, Wisconsin authorities released their first statement on Wednesday on what happened in the moments before the shooting, saying Blake had a knife "in his possession" when Officer Rusten Sheskey, a seven-year veteran of the force, fired his gun seven times into the 29-year-old's back.

It was not clear from the statement if the knife, recovered from inside the car, was in Blake's hands when he was shot or at any other point during the altercation.

Kenosha city officials ordered a 7pm to 7am curfew through Sunday in hopes of bringing calm after Tuesday's violence, which occurred as mostly white armed vigilantes flocked to the site of protests, saying they were there to defend private property.

Videos taken overnight on Tuesday show one of the vigilantes shooting at protesters with an assault rifle and apparently hitting two who tried to stop him.

The man then walks down the street freely, gun slung across his chest, while protesters scatter and police vehicles drive past him.

Two men were killed and one wounded in the arm in the shooting.

Police in Antioch, Illinois, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) southwest of Kenosha, announced on Wednesday afternoon that they had arrested a 17-year-old wanted in Kenosha for murder.

The suspect is widely identified as Kyle Rittenhouse.

Antioch court records indicate that Rittenhouse had been arrested as a fugitive on Wednesday and would face a hearing on his extradition to Wisconsin on Saturday.

'Restore law and order'

Blake remained hospitalized on Wednesday and may be permanently paralyzed from the waist down, according to his family.

Kenosha city police chief Daniel Miskins appeared before the media for the first time since Sunday but refused to answer questions on Blake's shooting.

However, the Wisconsin Department of Justice released a statement later that gave the official side of the incident for the first time.

Officers were sent to a residence in Kenosha "after a female caller reported that her boyfriend was present and was not supposed to be on the premises," the statement said.

During the incident, officers "attempted to arrest" Blake, it continued.

"Law enforcement deployed a taser to attempt to stop Mr Blake, however the taser was not successful in stopping Mr Blake. Mr Blake walked around his vehicle, opened the driver's side door, and leaned forward. While holding onto Mr Blake’s shirt, Officer Rusten Sheskey fired his service weapon seven times. Officer Sheskey fired the weapon into Mr Blake's back," it said.

"During the investigation following the initial incident, Mr Blake admitted that he had a knife in his possession," the statement said, adding that agents "recovered a knife from the driver's side floorboard of Mr Blake's vehicle."

Bystander video shows Sheskey shooting Blake as he tried to enter his car, which held his three sons, after what various witnesses describe as his intervention in a domestic incident.

Blake's father Jacob Blake Sr accused police of "senseless attempted murder."

'Find another way'

Blake's mother Julia Jackson pleaded for an end to the violence.

"For anyone who is doing anything that is violent or destructive, please stop," she said in an interview on Wednesday with ABC News.

"I get your pain. I get your frustration. This is nothing new and it's not just about my son, I get that. But please find another way."

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump announced he was deploying federal law enforcement and national guard troops to Kenosha "to restore law and order."

"We will NOT stand for looting, arson, violence, and lawlessness on American streets," Trump tweeted.

But local officials said they already had hundreds of police from around the state, some 250 national guard troops, and FBI and federal marshals helping them with the situation.


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