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McCloskeys say they waved guns because of 'violent' mob

A St. Louis couple who waved guns at demonstrators outside their home are seeking to keep their law licenses by arguing they were protecting their property from a violent mob

Via AP news wire
Friday 19 November 2021 15:38 EST
Racial Injustice St. Louis Couple
Racial Injustice St. Louis Couple

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A St. Louis couple who gained fame after waving guns at protesters near their home in 2020 are seeking to keep their law licenses by arguing their actions were justified because they were defending their property from a violent and threatening mob.

Mark and Patricia McCloskey who are both lawyers, made that claim in response to a complaint asking the Missouri Supreme Court to suspend their licenses.

The demonstrators went past the McCloskeys' home on June 28, 2020, at the height of racial injustice protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer.

The couple, who were eating dinner on the patio with their daughter, responded by waving two weapons at the protesters. No shots were fired and no one was hurt.

Their actions gained praise from conservatives, including then-President Donald Trump Mark McCloskey is now a Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate.

They contend in their legal response that violence during protests across the country in 2020 spread to St. Louis, where demonstrations ā€œinvolved significant unlawful and violent conduct,ā€ KCUR reported.

The response cites a report by the Major Cities Chiefs Association finding that nearly 89% of protests in St. Louis in June 2020 involved unlawful activity and 11% involved some level of violence.

The McCloskeys say some of the 350 to 500 protesters who marched past their home on the way to the then-mayor's house ignored signs they were entering a private street and destroyed a gate in from of their home, which they contend constitutes criminal rioting under Missouri law.

Some of the protesters shouted death, rape and arson threats against the couple, their daughter and their property, they said.

The McCloskeys were protecting ā€œtheir lives, home, and property by displaying firearmsā€ and holding off ā€œthe threatening mob,ā€ the response states.

Special prosecutor Richard Callahan has said his investigation determined the protesters were peaceful.

ā€œThere was no evidence that any of them had a weapon and no one I interviewed realized they had ventured onto a private enclave,ā€ Callahan said in a news release after the McCloskeys pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges.

Mark McCloskey pleaded guilty in June to misdemeanor fourth-degree assault and Patricia McCloskey pleaded guilty to misdemeanor harassment. Gov. Mike Parson later pardoned them.

Despite the pardons, Missouriā€™s chief disciplinary counsel, Alan D. Pratzel, has recommended the Missouri Supreme Court indefinitely suspend the McCloskeys' law license with no chance for reinstatement for six months. He said their actions showed ā€œindifference to public safetyā€ and involved ā€œmoral turpitude.ā€

In their response, the McCloskeys contend the pardon ā€œobliteratedā€ their convictions and demonstrates their conduct did not constitute moral turpitude.

The McCloskeysā€™ response notes the couple has received widespread public support and includes what it says are more than 250 unsolicited letters of support.

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