BALSAM LAKE, WIS. – The jury deciding the fate of Levi Acre-Kendall reconvened Sunday morning after a long Saturday of hearing impassioned closing arguments and beginning deliberations that may be complicated by a third charge added to the case.
The jurors, selected from Chippewa County for the Polk County trial because of intense publicity around the case, retired without reaching a verdict about 8 p.m. Saturday.
They must decide whether Acre-Kendall acted in self-defense when he fatally stabbed Peter S. Kelly on April 14 after the two men's fishing groups became embroiled in a verbal dispute along the St. Croix River, or whether his actions were an exaggerated reaction to the perceived threat Kelly posed.
"He's dancing on Peter Kelly's grave," Polk County District Attorney Dan Steffen said of Acre-Kendall's conduct after the stabbing, which he believes shows "consciousness of guilt."
Defense attorney Eric Nelson countered Steffen's comments with a plea for jurors to imagine themselves in Acre-Kendall's place as he was attacked by Kelly.
Steffen announced Saturday morning that he had added a third count to the case — second-degree reckless homicide — after Acre-Kendall testified Friday about the night he fatally stabbed Kelly, a 34-year-old married father of five from St. Croix Falls, Wis. The charge is a class D felony under Wisconsin law and carries a maximum prison term of 25 years.
The two class B counts previously charged against Acre-Kendall — first-degree reckless homicide and second-degree intentional homicide — each carry a maximum term of 60 years in prison.
Steffen did not state a reason for the move, but it could indicate his feelings about the strength of his case against Acre-Kendall, 20, of Cambridge, Minn.