Missouri Gov. Mike Parson announced that he made good on his promise to pardon a couple who gained notoriety for pointing guns at social justice demonstrators as they marched past the couple’s home in a luxury St. Louis enclave last year, reported The Associated Press.
Parson, a Republican, on Friday pardoned Mark McCloskey,
who pleaded
guilty in June to misdemeanor fourth-degree assault and was fined
$750, and Patricia McCloskey, who pleaded guilty to misdemeanor harassment and
was fined $2,000.
“Mark McCloskey has publicly stated that if he were involved
in the same situation, he would have the exact same conduct,” the McCloskeys’
lawyer Joel Schwartz said Tuesday. “He believes that the pardon vindicates that
conduct.”
The McCloskeys, both lawyers in their 60s, said they felt
threatened by the protesters, who were passing
their home in June 2020 on their way to demonstrate in front of the
mayor’s house nearby in one of hundreds of similar demonstrations around the
country after George
Floyd’s death. The couple also said the group was trespassing on a private
street.
Mark McCloskey emerged from his home with an AR-15-style
rifle, and Patricia McCloskey waved a semiautomatic pistol, according to the
indictment. Photos and cellphone video captured the confrontation, which drew
widespread attention and made the couple heroes to some and villains to others.
No shots were fired, and no one was hurt.
Special prosecutor Richard Callahan said his investigation
determined that the protesters were peaceful.
“There was no evidence that any of them had a weapon and no
one I interviewed realized they had ventured onto a private enclave,” Callahan
said in a news release after the McCloskeys pleaded guilty.
Several Republican leaders — including then-President Donald
Trump — spoke out in defense of the McCloskeys’ actions. The couple spoke on
video at last year’s Republican National Convention.
Mark McCloskey, who announced in May that he was running
for a U.S. Senate seat in Missouri, was unapologetic after the plea
hearing.
“I’d do it again,” he said from the courthouse steps in
downtown St. Louis. “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.”
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