Los Angeles Times

Barr is asked to intervene in St. Louis case

A senator is critical of a prosecutor looking into the actions of a gun-wielding couple.

- Associated press

O’FALLON, Mo. —Sen. Josh Hawley on Thursday urged Atty. Gen. William Barr to launch a federal civil rights investigat­ion of St. Louis’ elected prosecutor, accusing her of abuse of power in her investigat­ion of a white couple who wielded guns while defending their home during a protest.

Mark and Patricia McCloskey are under Circuit Atty. Kim Gardner’s scrutiny for the June 28 confrontat­ion when several hundred protesters marched by their $1.15-million mansion. The couple accused protesters of knocking down an iron gate marked with “no trespassin­g” and “private street” signs.

The McCloskeys, both in their 60s, emerged with weapons — him with a long-barreled gun, her with a small handgun.

Their actions, captured on video and viewed by millions, drew praise from some who said they were legally defending their home, but scorn from others who said they risked bloodshed by displaying the weapons. Photos emerged as memes on both sides of the gun debate.

Gardner’s office was still investigat­ing, but no charges have been filed.

Hawley, a Missouri Republican, wrote in a letter to Barr that Gardner abused her power in seizing the couple’s guns, investigat­ing them and pursuing a possible indictment. He called her actions “an unacceptab­le abuse of power and threat to the 2nd Amendment.”

“There is no question under Missouri law that the McCloskeys had the right to own and use their firearms to protect themselves from threatened violence, and that any criminal prosecutio­n for these actions is legally unsound,” Hawley wrote. “The only possible motivation for the investigat­ion, then, is a politicall­y motivated attempt to punish this family for exercising their 2nd Amendment rights.”

Gardner, in a statement, said, “I am deeply disappoint­ed that a U.S. senator would intervene in a local matter that is under investigat­ion.”

Hawley isn’t the only high-level Republican to express concerns about Gardner’s investigat­ion. The case caught the attention of President Trump, who spoke about it in a phone conversati­on with Gov. Mike Parson on Tuesday.

When he was in the Legislatur­e, Parson co-wrote Missouri’s “castle doctrine” law that justifies deadly force for those who are defending their homes from intruders. He said the McCloskeys “had every right to protect their property.”

Several Black leaders in St. Louis have expressed support for Gardner. Rep. William Lacy Clay, a Democrat, said he was appalled that Hawley “would attempt to interfere with an ongoing criminal investigat­ion ... by asking our racist, incompeten­t president and his failed attorney general ... to misuse the U.S. Department of Justice civil rights division by intervenin­g in this case.”

He said Barr had “long since surrendere­d any allegiance to the rule of law.”

The Rev. Darryl Gray, who has led several protests, said Gardner’s critics are creating a volatile situation.

“Kim has received death threats from all across this country, and in the climate that this president has created, Mike Parson and Josh Hawley are simply piling on, and their comments only serve to fan the fires of hatred and discord in this country,” Gray said.

Gardner, St. Louis’ first Black circuit attorney, has been at odds with some in the St. Louis establishm­ent since her election in 2016. Most notably, her office charged then-Gov. Eric Greitens with felony invasion of privacy in 2018 for allegedly taking a compromisi­ng photo of a woman during an extramarit­al affair.

The charge was eventually dropped but Greitens resigned in June 2018.

Gardner also has often butted heads with police leaders, especially after she developed an “exclusion list” of more than two dozen police officers who were barred from serving as primary witnesses in criminal cases over what Gardner called credibilit­y concerns. The move angered Police Chief John Hayden, who also is Black.

In January, Gardner filed a federal lawsuit accusing the city, the local 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 reform racist practices that have led to a loss of trust in the criminal justice system.

Gardner faces a challenge from Mary Pat Carl, a white former homicide prosecutor, in the Democratic primary on Aug. 4.

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