Really? This response has nothing to do with what I actually wrote. (No surprise there!)
Yeah it does, though if you're unsure why - the point is the weapons charge doesn't apply as he was carrying the rifle legally.
You said:
For me it was daft to charge him with murder. The only thing to charge him with was I think wrongful possession of his weapon.
But that's even dafter, at least they can attempt to make an argument re: the felony homicide or reckless endangerment charges, they don't even have a law that he breached re: the weapons charge.
RSo back to my point; the only thing where there might have been a breach of the law was to do with age and possessing that particular firearm. This was the only thing to charge him with, not murder, even though there might have been a technical reason why he was allowed to have that gun at his age.
It's not up to the jury to decide matters of law, this is a basic misunderstanding of what the function of the jury is, they decide matters of fact. The argument re: the facts are available already re: the weapons charge - is he 17 years old - yes, is the barrel length > 16 inches - yes. The prosecution agree and the judge threw the charge out, it didn't even get to the jury as there was nothing to decide.
Ironically Kyle was quite aware of Wisconsin law there and the prosecutor wasn't leading to him schooling the prosecutor on the stand when questioned about why he didn't carry a pistol.