St. Louis Couple Who Pointed Guns At BLM Protestors Receive Mayoral Pardon

BYJoe Abrams2.0K Views
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Committee on Arrangements for the 2020 Republican National Committee via Getty Image
The lawyer-couple went viral last summer for pointing an AR and handgun at Black Lives Matter protestors.

Summer 2020 was packed full of mass frustration and racial reckoning, following months of quarantine and the tragic killing of George Floyd. When the November election loomed, anger and hate polarized America as tension built around beliefs regarding race and justice.

One of the most infamous videos to come out of that Summer was of St. Louis lawyer couple, Mark and Patricia McCloskey. The pair were visibly armed with an assault rifle and handgun, as they approached Black Lives Matters protestors on their way to the Mayor's house, and threatened them. The video and photos of the incident that followed evoked strong reactions from both sides of the racial debate, though it seems Missouri Governor Mike Parson sympathized with the couple this week, in pardoning them for the related misdemeanors they ended up pleading guilty to. 

"Today we are incredibly thankful that Governor Mike Parson righted this wrong and granted us pardons," Mark McCloskey said as he left the courthouse. He had plead guilty to misdemeanor fourth-degree assault with a $750 fine and Patricia McCloskey plead guilty to misdemeanor harassment with a fine of $2000. The coupe and their legal team claim that the protestors were intent on harming the couple and their home, though Missouri prosecutor Richard Callahan reported that his investigation found the protestors were nothing but peaceful.

Still, McCloskey has no doubt he would act the same way again if the situation arose. "Any time the mob approaches me, I’ll do what I can to put them in imminent threat of physical injury because that’s what kept them from destroying my house and my family," McCloskey said on the courthouse steps. 

The couple received widespread support from republicans and guns rights activists across the country, including former President Donald Trump. They spoke at the Republican National Convention later that year to defend their actions. Last June, their lawyer told the NY Post that they considered themselves "longtime civil rights activists" despite their violent encounter with protestors. 

Do you think this was the right decision? Was justice served?


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