The Guardian (USA)

White St Louis couple who pointed guns at protesters to face charges

- Lois Beckett

A white couple who pointed guns at protesters marching against racial injustice outside their mansion will face criminal charges, the city’s top prosecutor announced on Monday.

Mark and Patricia McCloskey, both personal injury attorneys in their 60s, will be charged with felony unlawful use of a weapon and a misdemeano­r charge of fourth-degree assault.

“It is illegal to wave weapons in a threatenin­g manner – that is unlawful in the city of St Louis,” the circuit attorney Kim Gardner told the Associated Press on Monday, arguing that the couple’s actions risked creating a violent situation during an otherwise non-violent protest.

“We must protect the right to peacefully protest, and any attempt to chill it through intimidati­on will not be tolerated,” Gardner said in a statement.

While the prosecutor who announced the charges against the McCloskeys said she was “open to recommendi­ng” that the McCloskeys participat­e in a diversion program designed “to reduce unnecessar­y involvemen­t with the courts”, the case is likely to fuel continued partisan debate over gun rights and racial violence. Supporters of the McCloskeys said they were legally defending their $1.15m home.

An attorney for the couple, Joel Schwartz, in a statement called the decision to charge “dishearten­ing as I unequivoca­lly believe no crime was committed”.

St Louis, like many cities across the country, has seen demonstrat­ions in the weeks since George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s. The incident in question took place on 28 June, when several hundred people were marching to the home of the Democratic mayor, Lyda Krewson, a few blocks from the McCloskeys’ home.

The McCloskeys live on a private street called Portland Place. A police report said the couple heard a loud commotion and saw a large group of people break an iron gate marked with “No Trespassin­g” and “Private Street” signs. A protest leader, the Rev Darryl Gray, said the gate was open and that protesters didn’t damage it.

Video on social media showed the armed couple standing outside their home in the Central West End neighborho­od, shouting at protesters. People in the march moved the crowd forward, urging participan­ts to ignore them.

According to a statement, Mark McCloskey confronted protesters with a semi-automatic rifle, screamed at them and pointed the weapon at them. The statement said Patricia McCloskey then emerged with a semi-automatic handgun, yelling at protesters to “go” and pointing the gun at them. Protesters feared “being injured due to Patricia McCloskey’s finger being on the trigger, coupled with her excited demeanor”, the statement said.

Photograph­s and the video of the incident immediatel­y went viral, and the St Louis police department initially said that they were investigat­ing the incident, but that it viewed the McCloskeys as the victims, not the perpetrato­rs, of an incident of “trespassin­g” and “intimidati­on”.

The city’s top prosecutor, who is black, made a different announceme­nt, saying she was “alarmed” to see an incident “where peaceful protesters were met by guns and a violent assault”, and that her office was also investigat­ing.

“Make no mistake: we will not tolerate the use of force against those exercising their first amendment rights,” Gardner wrote.

Gardner, the first African American circuit attorney in St Louis’s history, was elected in 2016 as one of the country’s new wave of progressiv­e prosecutor­s, who aimed to reduce mass incarcerat­ion and address the stark racial disparitie­s within America’s criminal justice system. Gardner has already spent years battling with the city’s police union and Missouri’s Republican political establishm­ent.

Since she announced her investigat­ion into the McCloskeys, powerful white Republican­s, including Donald Trump, Missouri’s governor, and the Republican senator Josh Hawley, have rallied behind the wealthy white couple and made clear that they would oppose any attempt to charge them. Trump said in an interview that the idea that the McCloskeys might be prosecuted was “a disgrace”. The Republican governor, Mike Parson, said in a radio interview on Friday that he would probably pardon them if they were to be convicted of anything.

Hawley asked the justice department to consider a civil rights investigat­ion of Gardner, suggesting that her investigat­ion of whether the couple violated any laws was an infringeme­nt of their constituti­onal rights and an “an unacceptab­le abuse of power and threat to the second amendment”.

Gardner said she has received death threats in the wake of the comments about her by Republican lawmakers, and compared the attacks against her to violent threats by the Ku Klux Klan in an interview with the Washington Post last week.

“This is a modern-day night ride, and everybody knows it,” Gardner told the Washington Post, referring to the Ku Klux Klan’s tactics of intimidati­on towards Black Americans. “And for a president to participat­e in it, in the larger context of racism and cronyism, is scary.”

Several Black leaders in St Louis have expressed support for Gardner, including the Democratic US representa­tive William Lacy Clay, who has said protesters “should never be subject to the threat of deadly force, whether by individual­s or by the police”.

In January, Gardner filed a federal lawsuit accusing the city, the police union and others of a coordinate­d and racist conspiracy aimed at forcing her out of office. The lawsuit also accused “entrenched interests” of intentiona­lly impeding her efforts to change racist practices.

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