The Jerusalem Post

St. Louis couple who pointed guns at protesters say they felt threatened

- • By KIM BELL, RACHEL RICE and JOEL CURRIER

ST. LOUIS (St. Louis Post-Dispatch/ TNS) – Lawyers Mark and Patricia McCloskey, who pointed a rifle and pistol at protesters Sunday night in front of their St. Louis mansion, said through their lawyer Monday they felt threatened by two “bad actors” who destroyed an iron gate to their private street and lobbed insults at them.

The image of the couple brandishin­g the weapons went viral on Monday, with US President Donald Trump among those posting the video.

In the video and others on social media, some protesters can be seen pausing to film or photograph the couple, while others can be heard to shout, “Keep moving!” and “Let’s go!”

“My clients, as melanin-deficient human beings, are completely respectful of the message Black Lives Matter needs to get out, especially to whites,” said lawyer Albert Watkins. He said the McCloskeys “acted lawfully” out of “fear and apprehensi­on, the genesis of which was not race-related.”

But one of the protesters who witnessed the showdown on Portland Place told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch marchers only took notice of the McCloskeys when the couple emerged from their home armed and threatened to kill them.

“Several people were asking them to put their guns away or to stop pointing them at us,” said protester James Cooper. “I was afraid [Patricia McCloskey] would open fire or accidental­ly discharge into the crowd. I was afraid someone among us would legitimate­ly fear for their life and react defensivel­y, which could’ve sparked a bloodbath.”

The encounter played out as protesters marched through the Central West End toward Mayor Lyda Krewson’s home to demand her resignatio­n, because she had aired the names and addresses Friday of several protesters calling for the closure of the Medium Security Institutio­n, known as the workhouse.

In addition to a Post-Dispatch photograph­er documentin­g the confrontat­ion, a video of the incident posted to Twitter had been viewed more than 15 million times Monday.

“Private property!” Mark McCloskey shouted repeatedly at the crowd as he held a rifle. “Get out! Private property. Get out!” Patricia McCloskey

pointed a small handgun.

Someone in the crowd replied, “Calm down.” A woman protester yelled, “Then call the [expletive] cops, you idiot!” and “It’s a public street [expletive].”

To access Portland Place, the crowd entered through an iron pedestrian gate. The McCloskeys told police the protesters broke the gate to get in.

The couple’s renovation of their storied Renaissanc­e palazzo mansion on Portland Place was featured several years ago in St. Louis Magazine. City records show the property is appraised at $1.15 million. The windows at the couple’s law firm were boarded up Monday.

City police said the couple had called for help once they saw the large crowd enter Portland Place. The McCloskeys, both personal-injury lawyers, had been at home and heard a loud commotion coming from the street; they went to investigat­e and saw “a large group of subjects forcefully break an iron gate marked with ‘No Trespassin­g’ and ‘Private Street’ signs,” police said.

“The group began yelling obscenitie­s and threats of harm to both victims,” police said. “When the victims observed multiple subjects who were armed, they then armed themselves and contacted police.”

The crowd of protesters eventually moved to Krewson’s home on Lake Avenue, a block away.

Police said they are investigat­ing the incident on Portland Place but are labeling it as a case of trespassin­g and fourth-degree assault by intimidati­on. A police spokeswoma­n referred a reporter to “the courts” as to whether the couple were within their rights to point guns at protesters.

Anders Walker, a constituti­onal law professor at St. Louis University, said Monday it was “very dangerous” for the McCloskeys to engage with protesters by brandishin­g guns, but Missouri’s Castle Doctrine allows them to defend their property on Portland Place, a private street.

“At any point that you enter the property, they can then, in Missouri, use deadly force to get you off the lawn,” he said, calling the state’s Castle Doctrine a “force field” that “indemnifie­s you, and you can even pull the trigger in Missouri.”

Luckily, Walker said, no one got shot.

“There’s no right to protest on those streets,” he said. “The protesters thought they had a right to protest, but as a technical matter, they were not allowed to be there. It’s essentiall­y a private estate. If anyone was violating the law, it was the protesters. In fact, if [the McCloskeys] have photos of the protesters, they could go after them for trespassin­g.”

St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kimberly M. Gardner released a statement Monday saying she’s “alarmed at the events that occurred over the weekend where peaceful protestors [sic] were met by guns and a violent assault.”

Gardner said her office is investigat­ing the incident on Portland Place as well as an assault among protesters Saturday afternoon at the King Louis IX statue atop Art Hill in Forest Park.

Sunday’s protest culminated at Krewson’s house. Her spokesman did not reply to a reporter asking if Krewson was at home Sunday night.

 ?? (Lawrence Bryant/Reuters) ?? RESIDENTS DRAW their firearms on protesters as they enter their neighborho­od during a protest against St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson earlier this week.
(Lawrence Bryant/Reuters) RESIDENTS DRAW their firearms on protesters as they enter their neighborho­od during a protest against St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson earlier this week.

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