I'm not saying they're the same.
The whole point of using the Ersland case as an example is precisely because it's very easy to see how they are two separate incidents from a legal standpoint even though they happened quite close together in time and all stemmed from one initial action. The whole Ersland sequence was instigated by an armed robbery and took much less time than than the interval between the first Rittenhouse shooting and the the other two. Yet the instigator of the armed robbery in which Ersland was the victim was, only seconds later, the victim of a murder which Ersland perpetrated.
The point is that it's possible for what seems to initially be all one continuous event to be legally distinct events, each of which has its own set of circumstances, each of which will be evaluated separately from the others that precede or succeed it.
That is, it's a mistake to assume that all three of the Rittenhouse shootings will be treated as if they are simply pieces of one big incident--it's quite likely that they could be separated into two, or possibly even three different incidents each of which could have legally distinct outcomes for Rittenhouse.
The whole point of using the Ersland case as an example is precisely because it's very easy to see how they are two separate incidents from a legal standpoint even though they happened quite close together in time and all stemmed from one initial action. The whole Ersland sequence was instigated by an armed robbery and took much less time than than the interval between the first Rittenhouse shooting and the the other two. Yet the instigator of the armed robbery in which Ersland was the victim was, only seconds later, the victim of a murder which Ersland perpetrated.
The point is that it's possible for what seems to initially be all one continuous event to be legally distinct events, each of which has its own set of circumstances, each of which will be evaluated separately from the others that precede or succeed it.
That is, it's a mistake to assume that all three of the Rittenhouse shootings will be treated as if they are simply pieces of one big incident--it's quite likely that they could be separated into two, or possibly even three different incidents each of which could have legally distinct outcomes for Rittenhouse.