In wake of shootings, Kenosha mayor backs police brass despite calls for resignations
https://www.yahoo.com/news/in-wake-o...011148050.html
Mayor John Antaramian is a Democrat. not mentioned in the article. a Democrat supporting his police dept. who knew?? 
Kenosha, Wis., Mayor John Antaramian told reporters Friday that he  has no intention of requesting the resignations of Police Chief Daniel  Miskinis or County Sheriff David Beth, despite calls from various civil  rights groups for both men to step down following the recent police  shooting of Jacob Blake and the deaths of two protesters amid ongoing  unrest in the Wisconsin city.
“I think when you look at what has  occurred over the last week and all the activities going on, everyone is  doing the best that they can,” Antaramian said at a press conference on  Friday.
The Wisconsin city of roughly 100,000, which sits just  north of the Illinois border on the southwestern shore of Lake Michigan,  has become the latest center of civil unrest over police violence after  Jacob Blake Jr., a 29-year-old Black man, 
was shot by police in the back at least seven times on Sunday as he opened the door to his parked car.
The  shooting, which was captured on video by a bystander, quickly sparked  outrage and protests demanding justice devolved into violence and  looting on Sunday and Monday night, prompting city officials to declare a  state of emergency and impose a curfew. The unrest also attracted  members of a local militia and various other armed civilians,
 including Kyle Rittenhouse,  a 17-year-old who was arrested in Illinois Wednesday, on a warrant from  Wisconsin that identifies him as a suspect in the shooting of three  people during Tuesday night's protests, killing two and injuring one.
 On Thursday, 
the ACLU and 
a coalition of prominent civil rights leaders,  including Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP  Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and the Rev. Al Sharpton, founder of  the National Action Network, issued separate statements condemning the  response of Kenosha’s top law enforcement officials to the Blake  shooting and the events that followed.
 
 
 Kenosha Sheriff David Beth. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
Specifically, the groups expressed outrage over 
widely circulated video footage from Tuesday night’s protests that raise questions about the behavior of police before and after the shootings.
 
Video  taken shortly before the first shooting appears to show police officers  fraternizing with a group of armed civilians, including Rittenhouse,  who claimed to be protecting a nearby business, offering them water and  expressing appreciation for their presence. The video was taken after  dark, when a curfew was in effect. Additional footage from after the  shootings shows Rittenhouse, still armed, walking in the street with his  hands up toward police vehicles, while the officers inside appear to  ignore him. Bystanders can be heard on the tape trying to get the  attention of police and identifying Rittenhouse as the suspect.
At  a press conference Wednesday, Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth had  attempted to justify the apparently blatant failure to apprehend  Rittenhouse — who proceeded to leave the state and return home to  Antioch, Ill. — by suggesting that his deputies may have been too  distracted by all the people running and “screaming” and “nonstop radio  traffic” to notice the gunman apparently attempting to surrender right  in front of them.
“In situations that are high stress, you have such an incredible tunnel vision,” Beth said.
Meanwhile,  Kenosha Police Chief Daniel Miskinis appeared to suggest that the  victims were in part to blame for being out on the street, as “everybody  involved” in the Tuesday night shooting “was out after the curfew.”
“Had  persons not been out in violation of that, perhaps the situation that  unfolded would not have happened,” Miskinis said. Both men dismissed  officers’ apparently friendly interactions with armed militia members,  stating simply that such groups had not been invited to assist law  enforcement at the protest.
In the ACLU’s statement calling for  Beth and Miskinis to resign, Chris Ott, executive director of the ACLU  of Wisconsin, charged that “Their actions uphold and defend white  supremacy, while demonizing people who were murdered for exercising  their First Amendment rights and speaking out against police violence.”  The ACLU also cited a 
video of a 2018 press conference that  had begun recirculating online this week in which Beth called for five  people of color who’d been arrested for shoplifting to be put into  “warehouses” and “lock[ed] away for the rest of their lives.” Beth 
previously apologized for the comments after they prompted backlash.
On Friday, both he and Miskinis attempted to “course-correct,” while offering little in the way of new information.
Miskinis  started by stating that his previous comments about the role of curfew  in Tuesday night’s shootings had been “misconstrued.”
“In no way  was my comment earlier intended to suggest that by being out after  curfew those people were responsible for their deaths,” Miskinis told  reporters Friday.
Asked again to address why Rittenhouse was able  to leave the scene, and then the state, after allegedly shooting three  people, Miskinis doubled down on the claim that the officers seen  driving past Rittenhouse were “very unlikely to have heard anything  being said around them,” while adding a new line of reasoning that  Rittenhouse was just one of many people walking around the area with  weapons, and at the time there was “nothing to suggest” that he was the  gunman.
 Rittenhouse was arrested in Antioch, Ill., where he lives,  after he was charged with first-degree intentional homicide in Kenosha.  On Thursday, prosecutors in Kenosha County filed several more charges  against the teenager, according to court records. Rittenhouse now faces  five felony charges, including first-degree reckless homicide and  first-degree intentional homicide, as well as one misdemeanor count for  possession of a dangerous weapon by a minor.
 
 
 A  protester was shot in the chest in Kenosha, Wis., on Tuesday, the third  day of protests over the shooting Jacob Blake Jr. by a police officer.  (Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Rittenhouse  is currently in jail in Illinois, pending extradition to Wisconsin.  During a status hearing Friday morning, a judge in Lake County agreed to  delay the teen’s extradition proceedings until Sept. 25, while his  family obtains a private attorney. He has not been arraigned in  Wisconsin and has not entered a plea.
 
Beth said that he hadn’t  watched any of the videos that have been circulating on social media —  including the one of Blake being shot in the back by a cop— 
except for the one  showing a law-enforcement officer handing out water bottles to  Rittenhouse and other armed militia members, telling them, “We  appreciate you guys, we really do.”
Beth first claimed that, while  the word “SHERIFF” can be seen in big block letters along the side of  the camouflaged armored vehicle in the video, “it wasn’t one of our  BearCats.”
As for the officers tolerating armed civilians on the  street during a violent demonstration after curfew, “I support the  Second Amendment,” he said. “The people that have been here carrying  guns, they haven’t been arrested because that’s a right they have.”
But “are we asking for them to come in and support things? I’m not,” he said.
For  his part, “I’ve made it clear my opinion on armed militia out in the  street,” the mayor said. “We do not want you here. … Stay away.”