St. Louis Couple Charged After Waving Guns Appear In Court

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Mark and Patricia McCloskey listen to their attorney Joel Schwartz address the media as they leave court after a first appearance on felony weapons charges on Monday, Aug. 31, 2020, in St. Louis, Mo. The couple were charged in July with one felony count of unlawful use of a weapon — exhibiting, after they confronted protesters who were marching through their private street en route to Mayor Lyda Krewson's house in June. (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The attorney for a white St. Louis couple charged for waving guns during a racial injustice protest outside their home said Monday that they’re anxious to prove “with absolute certainty” that they did not commit a crime.

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One week after Mark and Patricia McCloskey spoke on video to the Republican National Convention, they were in court briefly Monday morning and did not enter a plea. The judge continued their case until Oct. 6.

The couple emerged from their Renaissance palazzo-style mansion with guns on the night of June 28 after protesters veered onto their private street. The couple said the demonstrators knocked down an iron gate and ignored a “No Trespassing” sign, and they felt threatened.

Mark McCloskey, 63, came out with AR-15 rifle, according to court records, which said Patricia McCloskey, 61, displayed a semiautomatic handgun. No shots were fired.

St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner said their actions created the risk of bloodshed during what she called an otherwise peaceful protest. She charged both with felony unlawful use of a weapon.

The McCloskeys did not speak to reporters after the court hearing. Their attorney, Joel Schwartz, reiterated their claims that no laws were broken.

“We are simply anxious to remove all the noise from this case, move the case forward, and have the facts heard by a jury and let the jury decide whether or not the McCloskeys committed any felony offenses because we are convinced with absolute certainty that there was no felony committed here,” Schwartz said.

Missouri law allows homeowners to use force, even lethal force, to defend their homes. The McCloskeys drew support from President Donald Trump, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson and other leading Republicans.

Last week, the McCloskeys, who are both attorneys, made the case in an opening night speech of the Republican National Convention that they had a “God-given right” to defend themselves and their property.


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9 Comments
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Normal
Normal
3 years ago

Instead of charging two professionals who actually did nothing, perhaps the police should me chasing the animals going around and murdering random people for fun

anonymous
anonymous
3 years ago

They were once democrats, spoke at the RNC , and millions of indies for self defence will follow suit.
The only way dems win is by cheating on ballots.
Last desperate criminal act.

Joe Hiden
Joe Hiden
3 years ago

Elect Joe/Kamala , and anybody defending against robbers , rapists, murderers and home invaders , will go to jail. Crazy & scary.

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
3 years ago

They brandished weapons. That is a crime.

Israel
Israel
3 years ago

Not only that but at least one of the alleged peaceful protestors who had surrounded this couple on their private property was waving a pistol!

Yaakov Doe
Yaakov Doe
3 years ago

Just a couple of deranged gun nuts admired by Donald Trump. The way that woman waved the gun around with her finger on the trigger indicates she never took any gun safety courses.