Kenosha trial update:
The jury instructions are in, and despite debate with the judge, the blurry "enhanced" images are still going to the jury.
I definitely feel the defense should have pushed harder today. Especially when the prosecution is not only putting in instructions on provocation but also including lesser offenses. Almost certainly, the prosecution is going to spend a great deal of time to hammer in to the jury that the shooter provoked by threatening Ziminski/Rosenbaum, despite the fact that nobody--not even the Ziminskis--have testified that the shooter did threaten them, and despite the fact that the image--submitted in the eleventh hour--cannot possibly show what the prosecutor is insisting on beyond a reasonable doubt.
The defense should have objected more and the judge should not have been so lenient on the prosecution after all of the shenanigans the prosecution have pulled. Instead, it looks like the shooter now has to bet that the jury won't fixate on "shouldn't have been there" arguments that, while legally irrelevant, are almost certainly going to treated as provocation in the minds of some of the jurors. Lesser included offenses are also going to make it more likely for the jury to "compromise" to satisfy a juror's idea that the shooter should be made "guilty of something".
We know that some in the jury pool that weren't publically filtered out made statements that can cast doubt impartiality--statements on guns, for instance. Keep in mind that Kenosha County is about 50/50 democrat and republican (according to presidential election at least). Chances are there are going to be roughly equal of each party in there.
I don't recall at this moment if the judge has made a decision on the rifle possession exception in 948.60(3)(c). I'll have to go back and check at some point. There is testimony on the record that the rifle does not have a short barrel (and the shooter was 17).
I can only hope that if there is no acquittal then the judge will go for a mistrial with prejudice or will toss in a JNOV on charges that no reasonable jury can find the defendant guilty of (basically all of them given the evidence or lack thereof, and the poor performance of the prosecution). A conviction here would basically make the privilege of self-defense unreasonably difficult to exercise (in a duty-to-retreat state to boot), and would have chilling effects on people's legal exercise of their Second Amendment rights (open-carrying as provocation is pure hoplophobia).
In other, happier news,
Steve Bannon has been indicted for criminal contempt of Congress (so the DoJ is enforcing it).