Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

McCloskeys want their weapons back

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ST. LOUIS – The city of St. Louis has not destroyed guns seized months ago from the couple who made headlines by waving the weapons at racial injustice protesters, and the couple is trying to get them back.

Robert Dierker of the City Counselor’s Office told a judge during a virtual hearing Wednesday that the guns taken in 2020 from Mark and Patricia McCloskey have not been disposed of, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

“Obviously with our customary efficiency, we should have destroyed (the weapons) months ago,” Dierker said. “We haven’t. So McCloskey’s a beneficiary of bureaucrat­ic, I want to say, ineptitude. But in any event, it’s fortuitous that the weapons still exist.”

The McCloskeys, lawyers in their 60s, said they felt threatened by the protesters who walked onto their private street during global protests that followed the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Mark McCloskey emerged from his home with an AR-15style rifle, and Patricia McCloskey waved a semi-automatic pistol.

Photos and cellphone video captured the confrontat­ion, which drew widespread attention and made the couple heroes to some and villains to others. No shots were fired, and no one was hurt.

The use of weapons led to charges and the McCloskeys pleaded guilty in June to misdemeano­rs. As part of the plea, they voluntaril­y gave up the guns. Republican Gov. Mike Parson granted pardons weeks later.

Mark McCloskey, who is running for the U.S. Senate as a Republican, sued St. Louis, the city sheriff and state to get back the guns. He said during Wednesday’s hearing that the pardons also entitle the couple to a refund of their fines.

“The loss of that property would certainly be a legal disqualification, impediment or other legal disadvanta­ge, of which I have now been absolved by the governor, and therefore the state no longer has any legitimate reason to hold the property,” McCloskey said.

The City Counselor’s Office contends that Parson’s pardon obliterate­d the conviction, but not the plea agreement in which McCloskey forfeited the guns. Circuit Judge Joan Moriarty took the case under advisement.

 ?? LAURIE SKRIVAN/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP ?? Mark and Patricia McCloskey made headlines by waving weapons at racial injustice protesters in June 2020.
LAURIE SKRIVAN/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP Mark and Patricia McCloskey made headlines by waving weapons at racial injustice protesters in June 2020.

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