Missouri Gov. Mike Parson is the answer to the question: Whereโs the merit in Critical Race Theory? Because for an academic study that examines how race affects American structures such as our legal system, Parsonโs method for how he decides whoโs worth his official pardon would make for a perfect case study.
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In June, Parson said pardoning a Black inmate who has been in prison for more than 40 years for a triple murder state and federal prosecutors now say he didnโt commit just isnโt a priority for his office. So what type of case does Parson think is worth prioritizing? Well, on Tuesday, he announced the pardoning of a gun-toting white couple who loves firearms but hates anti-racism protesters.
According to the Associated Press, Parson announced that he had fulfilled his promise to pardon Patricia and Mark McCloskey, the white St. Louis couple who were indicted by a grand jury for brandishing guns at protesters who were marching past their home in June last year.
The Great Value Boris and Natasha couple became Republican sweethearts after the incident, which earned them an invite to the Republican National Convention, so itโs no surprise that a conservative governor thought they were worth pardoning while deciding a Black man whoโs been locked up since 1978 can wait his turn for clemency consideration.
As The Root previously reported, Parson said in September that he โmost certainly wouldโ pardon the couple if they were convicted.
โWeโll let it play out and see how this all comes out in the courts, but I stand by what I said,โ Parsons told reporters. Unfortunately, he didnโt have that same energy for a falsely accused non-criminal in June.
The Associated Press reports 62-year-old Kevin Strickland, a Black man, has been in prison for more than 40 years for a triple murder prosecutors now say he didnโt commit. Parson, a white Republican who, like most people, will never know what itโs like to have his freedom taken away for something he didnโt do, said in a news conference at the time that setting Strickland free simply isnโt at the top of his officeโs to-do list.
โWhen something like that comes up, we look at those cases, but I donโt know that that necessarily makes it a priority to jump in front of the line,โ he said. โWe understand some cases are going to draw more attention through the media than others, but weโre just going to look at those things.โ
You would think Parson was describing a case where someone got a speeding ticket while not being able to afford any more points on their driverโs license. Instead, his casual AF attitude is something he thinks is appropriate for a case where heโs been asked to consider the clemency petition for someone who prosecutors say has been falsely imprisoned for more than four decades.
Parson also noted that Strickland was tried and found guilty โby a jury of his peers.โ Thereโs only one problem with that statementโitโs a whole-ass lie.
From the AP:
The Star reported in September that two men who pleaded guilty in the killings for decades swore Strickland was not with them and two other accomplices during the shooting. The only eyewitness also recanted and wanted Strickland released.
In a petition filed with the Missouri Supreme Court in May, defense attorneys also noted that prosecutors removed the only four Black potential jurors from the trial for Strickland, who is Black.
Because of the prosecutionโs โracially motivatedโ strikes, Stricklandโs fate was decided by an all-white jury during a trial overseen by a white judge with white lawyers, the Star reported.
Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker, federal prosecutors in the Western District of Missouri, Jackson Countyโs presiding judge and Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas have all called for Strickland to be granted clemency, according to the AP.
In contrast, not only did the McCloskeys plead guilty to the charges against them, but after his plea hearing in May, Mark unabashedly declared, โIโd do it again!โ
โAny time the mob approaches me, Iโll do what I can to put them in imminent threat of physical injury because thatโs what kept them from destroying my house and my family,โ he said, AP reports. โToday we are incredibly thankful that Governor Mike Parson righted this wrong and granted us pardons.โ
In fact, the only consistency Parson has shown in the two cases is his unwillingness to listen to prosecutors.
According to AP, Special prosecutor Richard Callahan said his investigation determined that the protesters the couple was pointing dangerous weapons at were peaceful.
โThere was no evidence that any of them had a weapon and no one I interviewed realized they had ventured onto a private enclave,โ Callahan said.
So yeahโwe see where Parsonโs โprioritiesโ lie. They lie with white supremacy and indifference to Black suffering.
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