Sponsored link
Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Sponsored link

News + PoliticsProtestRittenhouse verdict: 'If he were Black he would be going away for...

Rittenhouse verdict: ‘If he were Black he would be going away for life’

Cat Brooks, Justice Teams Network director, responds to the jury in Kenosha

-

The Kyle Rittenhouse verdict stunned a lot of people around the country—but in some ways, it’s no surprise.

That’s what Cat Brooks, executive director of the Justice Teams Network, told me this afternoon.

Kenosha County Courthouse and Jail. Photo by Kenneth C. Zirkel, (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Brooks wrote an oped the day before the verdict noting that

Most alarming is that no matter how offensive or anti-Black, none of the actions of the judges, prosecutors, or defendants themselves is outside of American law.

It wasn’t illegal for the judge in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial to prevent the prosecution from calling the two people Rittenhouse killed, and one he injured, “victims,” while simultaneously granting the defense permission to call those protesting a cop shooting Jacob Blake seven times in the back “rioters” and “looters.”

But in the wake of the verdict, she said, “Black folks took a punch in the gut again. The verdict laid bare that courts were built to come down on the side of white supremacy.”

The most alarming thing, she told me, is that white supremacists are watching these trials “to see what they can get away with. If you are white and defending property, you can literally kill with impunity.

“If he were Black and had gone to a MAGA rally with a military assault rifle, he’d be going away for life.”

Protesters will gather in Oakland 6pm at 14th Street and Broadway and are demanding that the federal Justice Department take action on the case. Rittenhouse faced state charges, and possibly could still be charged under federal statutes.

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.
Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

Screen Grabs: Arab Film Fest kicks off with ‘Palestine 36’

Plus: Doc Stories, Ode to Joy, Gunvor Nelson, Marta Mateus, Rithy Pahn, terrific 'Train Dreams,' misfire 'Nuremberg,' more movies

Obscure bill could open more neighborhoods to chain stores (and undermine labor)

Plus: Conditions at a private prison in the Tenderloin, Lurie's Rich Family Housing Plan, and taxing the billionaires ... that's The Agenda for Nov. 3 to 10

Queer activists ‘Scare the State’ at ICE protest on Halloween

Colorful protest at 100 Montgomery drew attention to immigration court abductions, with drag, costumes, and piñatas.

More by this author

Obscure bill could open more neighborhoods to chain stores (and undermine labor)

Plus: Conditions at a private prison in the Tenderloin, Lurie's Rich Family Housing Plan, and taxing the billionaires ... that's The Agenda for Nov. 3 to 10

New study makes clear: The Wiener-Lurie plan will NOT bring down housing prices

The Yimbys are furious that a new report says upzoning won't produce much new housing. The bigger story is that it will fail to produce affordability

Activists pressure Melgar on key element of mayor’s Rich Family Zoning Plan

Land Use chair will have to decide between tenant activists and the mayor
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED