VeteranXX Contributor
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Quote:
(ST. LOUIS) — A grand jury on Tuesday indicted the St. Louis couple who displayed guns while hundreds of racial injustice protesters marched on their private street.
Al Watkins, an attorney for the couple, confirmed to The Associated Press the indictments against Mark McCloskey, 63, and his wife, Patricia McCloskey, 61. A spokeswoman for Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner declined comment.
The McCloskeys, who are both attorneys, have become folk heroes among some conservatives. They argue that they were simply exercising their Second Amendment right to bear arms, and were protected by Missouri’s castle doctrine law that allows the use of deadly force against intruders. The case has caught the attention of President Donald Trump, and Republican Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has said he will pardon the couple if they are convicted.
Read more: 93% of Black Lives Matter Protests Have Been Peaceful, New Report Finds
The McCloskeys also were featured speakers on the first night of the Republican National Convention. They’ve accused the “leftist” Democratic St. Louis leadership for their plight.
But Gardner, a Democrat, charged the couple with felony unlawful use of a weapon. She said the display of guns risked bloodshed at what she called an otherwise peaceful protest.
Watkins said that addition to the weapons charge, the grand jury indictment includes a tampering with evidence charge. It wasn’t clear what led to that additional count, he said.
The McCloskeys contend the protest was hardly peaceful. They say protesters came onto the private street after knocking over an iron gate and ignoring a “No Trespassing sign,” and said they felt threatened.
The incident happened June 28 as protesters were walking toward the home of Mayor Lyda Krewson, a few blocks away. They suddenly decided to veer onto the McCloskeys’ street, prompting the confrontation that was caught on cellphone video. It showed Mark McCloskey in front of the $1.15 million home armed with an AR-15 rifle and Patricia McCloskey with a semiautomatic handgun.
Read more: Why The Killing of George Floyd Sparked an American Uprising
A police probable cause statement said protesters feared “being injured due to Patricia McCloskey’s finger being on the trigger, coupled with her excited demeanor.”
Nine people involved in the protest were charged with misdemeanor trespassing, but the city counselor’s office later dropped the charges. The city counselor’s office handles lesser crimes and is not affiliated with the circuit attorney’s office.
Mark McCloskey, after a brief court hearing last week, expressed anger that he and his wife faced criminal charges while those who trespassed onto his property did not.
“Every single human being that was in front of my house was a criminal trespasser,” McCloskey said on Oct. 6. “They broke down our gate. They trespassed on our property. Not a single one of those people is now charged with anything. We’re charged with felonies that could cost us four years of our lives and our law licenses.”
The June protest in St. Louis was among hundreds nationwide in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis.
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Remember kids, its against the law to defend yourself
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VeteranXX
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don't forget the tampering with evidence charge on top for claiming the pistol couldn't fire
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cael
don't forget the tampering with evidence charge on top for claiming the pistol couldn't fire
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ST. LOUIS — The gun Patricia McCloskey waved at protesters was inoperable when it arrived at the St. Louis police crime lab, but a member of Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner's staff ordered crime lab experts to disassemble and reassemble it and wrote that it was “readily capable of lethal use” in charging documents filed Monday, 5 On Your Side has learned.
In Missouri, police and prosecutors must prove that a weapon is “readily” capable of lethal use when it is used in the type of crime with which the McCloskeys have been charged.
Assistant Circuit Attorney Chris Hinckley ordered crime lab staff members to field strip the handgun and found it had been assembled incorrectly. Specifically, the firing pin spring was put in front of the firing pin, which was backward, and made the gun incapable of firing, according to documents obtained by 5 On Your Side.
Firearms experts then put the gun back together in the correct order and test-fired it, finding that it worked, according to the documents.
Patricia McCloskeys gun reassembled at request of prosecutor | ksdk.com
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VeteranXX
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yeah it was magically rendered inert before it was turned in imagine that
the grand jury imagined it and added 2 new charges that weren't even recommended
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VeteranXV Contributor
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I didn't have to look to see kale dumpster posting already
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VeteranXX Contributor
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They're white and rich so they won't serve time, but they will have to spend hundreds of thousands to weasel out.
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VeteranXV Contributor
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Or just get a fair trial since they didn't do anything against the law
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Maybe we need a new crime bill that targets whites Levan?
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vanster
They're white and rich so they won't serve time, but they will have to spend hundreds of thousands to weasel out.
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They shouldn't have to spend anything since the people that broke through a gate to trespass into a private community had all charges dropped..oh and that whole pesky 2nd amendment thing
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VeteranXX Contributor
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They may be found guilty, but will win any appeal.
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LawnDart
Or just get a fair trial since they didn't do anything against the law
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Evidence tampering is a felony. Playing by the rules, they'd do time.
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VeteranXX Contributor
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no they won't
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VeteranXV Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vanster
Evidence tampering is a felony. Playing by the rules, they'd do time.
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Since you have been in the court system enough ..you are the expert here
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vanster
Evidence tampering is a felony. Playing by the rules, they'd do time.
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They're saying the pistol was already disabled as he was using it as a prop in a court case. Then that would make the state responsible for tampering with evidence
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Absolute travesty of justice. Protecting your property should not even gotten them arrested in the first place, so anything after is a result of a false arrest imo. They have constitutional rights which apparently do not matter anymore.
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Last edited by Mr Jimmy Pop; 10-07-2020 at 06:21..
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Pooptruck++
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In the civilised world they would already be in jail from about 15 minutes after that pic was taken.
FREEEEEEDUUUUMB
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or something³ Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mitchdubai
In the civilised world they would already be in jail from about 15 minutes after that pic was taken.
FREEEEEEDUUUUMB
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In the civilised world the sheikh would have ordered the protesters butchered by his elite guards and blamed everything on the Jews.
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Sour++ Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vanster
Evidence tampering is a felony. Playing by the rules, they'd do time.
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charges always stick right bruh
u don't have any dropped felonies do u lmfao
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mitchdubai
In the civilised world they would already be in jail from about 15 minutes after that pic was taken.
FREEEEEEDUUUUMB
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In a civilized world you wouldn't be importing people from third world countries to clean your toilets, **** Shuffler.
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VeteranXX Contributor
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Be nice guys. Past is past. Just like Havax stopped smoking and shouldn't be harassed with it anymore, Vanster has stopped chocking *****es,,, MOVEON is the commie model.
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