Boston Sunday Globe

When ‘law and order’ means neither

- BY RENÉE GRAHAM Renée Graham is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at renee.graham@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @reneeygrah­am.

In a tweet last month, Governor Greg Abbott of Texas declared, “Texas has been — and always will be — a law and order state. And we are going to stay that way.” Yet there was Abbott last weekend promising a get-out-of-jail-free card to a man who was convicted of murder less than 24 hours earlier.

This has nothing to do with law and order and everything to do with right-wing politics and who is — and isn’t — deemed worthy of justice in America.

On July 25, 2020, in Austin, Texas, Daniel Perry shot and killed Garrett Foster, who was attending a Black Lives Matter protest. After Perry drove his car toward a crowd of demonstrat­ors, Foster, who was legally armed in the open-carry state, approached the car. Perry killed him. (Like Perry, Foster was white.)

Foster died exactly two months to the day after the tragedy that spurred such demonstrat­ions nationwide — the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer. Perry, an Army sergeant, claimed self-defense. The jury disagreed. After 17 hours of deliberati­ons, they found him guilty of murder.

But even before Perry could be sentenced, Abbott tweeted: “I am working as swiftly as Texas law allows regarding the pardon of Sgt. Perry. Texas has one of the strongest ‘Stand Your Ground’ laws of self-defense that cannot be nullified by a jury or a progressiv­e District Attorney.”

In one shocking statement, Abbott undermined the rule of law, took a swing at Jose Garza, the Travis County district attorney whose office prosecuted Perry, and robbed Foster’s loved ones of any modicum of accountabi­lity for his murder.

“For the first time since I lost Garrett, I felt some sense of justice and relief when the jury rendered its verdict,” Whitney Mitchell, Foster’s fiancée, said in a statement released after Abbott’s comments. “But the governor has immediatel­y taken that away since he announced there are two legal systems in Texas: one for those with power, like Mr. Perry, and one for everyone else . . . . I hope the governor never again claims that he stands for victims’ rights.”

The only rights Abbott is recognizin­g are those of the man who, months before he killed Foster, texted to a friend, “I might have to kill a few people on my way to work” because, he claimed, protesters were “rioting” near his apartment complex.

Much like Kyle Rittenhous­e became a Republican darling after he shot two men to death and wounded a third at an antiracism protest in Kenosha, Wis., in 2020, Perry is regarded as a hero. After Rittenhous­e’s acquittal in 2021, Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida said that he “did what we should want citizens to do in such a situation: step forward to defend the community against mob violence.”

That’s the same extremist motivation behind Abbott’s push to pardon Perry. In conservati­ve circles, men like Perry should be hailed as defenders, not tried as defendants when they strike against anyone challengin­g the racist status quo. Their lawlessnes­s is deemed not just acceptable, but necessary in defense of white supremacy.

What Rittenhous­e and Perry did is not “what we should want citizens to do.” For any politician to say so is tantamount to state-endorsed vigilantis­m. And like that strident “anti-rioting” legislatio­n DeSantis signed into law in 2021, the intention is clear — to stifle the constituti­onal right to peaceful protest and dissent under the shadow of unpunished violence. (DeSantis’s law remains temporaril­y blocked and knotted up in court cases.)

Without question, the 2020 protests after Floyd’s murder, arguably the largest demonstrat­ions in this nation’s history, left Republican lawmakers shaken and reactionar­y. It’s no coincidenc­e that some were eager to send a pointed message to those dedicated to upending systemic racism and police violence.

When Mark and Patricia McCloskey, St. Louis’s barefoot Bonnie and Clyde, pointed guns at peaceful protesters walking by their home, they weren’t criticized by Republican­s for fomenting fear and unrest. Instead, they were invited to speak at the virtual Republican National Convention in 2020. A month after they pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r charges, the couple was pardoned by Republican Governor Michael Parson of Missouri.

Abbott can’t pardon Perry — yet. But he’s pushing to fast-track the process with the state’s Board of Pardons and Paroles. Meanwhile, Fox News is calling Garza a “Soros-backed DA,” an antisemiti­c GOP attack that evokes George Soros, the liberal Jewish billionair­e and frequent target of Republican ire.

As is their right, Perry’s lawyers have filed an appeal for a retrial. But for now the jury’s verdict stands. Absent a reversal, Perry is a convicted murderer who should spend the rest of his life in prison. But in all likelihood, he won’t. For purely political reasons, Abbott, who preaches law and order, wants a killer back on the streets of a divided nation where, increasing­ly, “law and order” means neither.

 ?? ?? Texas Governor Greg Abbott, left, wants to pardon a man convicted of murdering a Black Lives Matter protester.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott, left, wants to pardon a man convicted of murdering a Black Lives Matter protester.
 ?? RICARDO B. BRAZZIELL AND JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA AP ?? Right, the victim’s fiancée, Whitney Mitchell.
RICARDO B. BRAZZIELL AND JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA AP Right, the victim’s fiancée, Whitney Mitchell.

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