Kyle Rittenhouse announced a game about shooting "fake news" turkeys. His cartoon avatar is styled like the night he killed 2 protestors. The game will fund defamation lawsuits to "bankrupt the media."

On Monday, Kyle Rittenhouse made an appearance on the You Are Here show, which airs BlazeTV. During the interview, he complained about the tweet from LeBron James mocking the fake tears he cried while taking the stand in his own defense at his murder trial.

A small group of students at Arizona State University called Students for Socialism is letting it be known that they don't want Kyle Rittenhouse soiling their school's good name by joining the student body after he announced he was taking nursing classes online there.

Just 24 hrs. after being found not guilty of all charges, Kyle Rittenhouse might be taking it back to court with a potential defamation case against President Biden. According to Fox News, the case would be over a tweet suggesting Rittenhouse was a White supremacist. Per Fox, Todd McMurtry, who helped former Covington Catholic High School student Nicholas Sandmann reach a settlement with CNN over a defamation lawsuit, said Biden could be held accountable for a September 30, 2020, social media post weeks before he was elected. "There’s no other way to put it: the President of the United States refused to disavow white supremacists on the debate stage last night," Biden's tweet said.

Kyle Rittenhouse allowed to draw random names of jurors to be removed from the bench in his murder case

On Monday, before closing arguments in Kyle Rittenhouse's murder trial, Judge Bruce Schroeder inexplicably dismissed the defendant's misdemeanor gun charge of possession of a dangerous weapon by a person under 18.

Kyle Rittenhouse cries and defense moves to have Judge Bruce Schroeder during day two of murder trail for Kenosha killing

On the third day of the Kyle Rittenhouse trial, Kenosha County Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder dismissed a juror who joked with a courtroom deputy about why Kenosha police shot Jacob Blake.

Wisconsin Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder ruled that during Kyle Rittenhouse's murder trial, prosecutors may not refer to Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber, who were killed, and Gaige Grosskreutz, who survived, as “victims.” But they can be referred to as “rioters,” “looters” and “arsonists.”

Gaige Grosskreutz, the only survivor of Kyle Rittenhouse's shooting rampage in Kenosha, filed a lawsuit against Kenosha, Sheriff David Beth and others alleging that "law enforcement officers and white nationalist militia persons discussed and coordinated strategy" that led to the shooting.

KenoshaJudge to hear multiple motions from the prosecution and the defense in Kyle Rittenhouse murder trial today