Daniel Perry Is A Baffling Waste of a Pardon
The conservative narrative around Daniel Perry coalesced pretty early. An “evil,” “Soros-backed” prosecutor in Austin, Texas had wrongfully convicted an Army Sergeant who had done nothing more than act in reasonable self-defense when a BLM protester pointed an AK-47 at him. He should be pardoned, they argue, as the victim of liberal prosecutorial overreach—especially because police officers did not initially think that he had committed a crime.
Here’s the guy who selected many of Trump’s judges explaining his point of view:
This story has such narrative force right now because it confirms an important prior on the Right: the law is unfairly applied to them, and they courts have conspired to persecute them while allowing a pervasive crime wave to destroy America’s cities.
But this account has two minor problems:
- The facts
- The law
The single most important fact that conservatives come back to, again and again, is that the victim, Garrett Foster, had pointed an AK-47 at Daniel Perry’s head. And it’s not true.
Let’s start with the obvious. There were many eyewitnesses in this case. And not one of them testified that Foster had pointed his weapon at Perry. “That’s nothing,” Perry stans rely, because these people are BLM protesters totally devoid of the simple decency and kindness that marks real Americans, and they must have all agreed to lie in court, identically, to ensure that Perry would be convicted by a panel of soft-handed Soros-loving libs.
But you know who else said the weapon was not pointed at Daniel Perry? Daniel Perry. See, Perry made the classic mistake of so many people who like police. He talked to police. And he told a sympathetic officer that “I believe[d] he was going to aim at me. I didn’t want to give him a chance to aim at me.” Not only did Foster not aim a weapon at Perry, he didn’t have the “chance” to.
And why, exactly, did this altercation happen in the first place?
As Perry told police, he was distracted because he was trying to “hang out” with an Uber passenger and she requested $200 for her time. He was so distracted that he ran his car into some protesters. Witnesses described the sound of squealing tires as he accelerated.
One of the people Perry almost hit was Whitney Mitchell, a quadruple amputee who was being pushed through the protest by a friend while her husband, Garrett Foster, marched. Foster, an Air Force veteran, was upset that someone had almost hurt or killed his wife. Protesters were banging on the car with their hands. And Foster told Perry to “move on,” gesturing at his weapon
Perry shot him five times in the center of mass, killing him. And then he called police, saying he’d fired in self-defense. The cops were sympathetic! After all, these were people who were protesting them, specifically, and the news were filled with stories of lawless protesters “burning cities to the ground” while the police were held back by liberal city officials. Perry was not even arrested, initially, and the detective he spoke to was called as a witness for the defense.
Perry did not testify at trial, and so the jury had to take the facts as they were given, and decide whether he was justified in shooting Foster. It did not help that Perry repeatedly posted on social media about killing protesters, that he claimed he would be acquitted on self-defense if he did so, and that, when a friend pointed out that you can’t shoot someone you provoke, he pushed back.
And provocation was at the heart of the State’s case. “The rule of law is that if the defendant provoked another to make an attack on him, so that the defendant would have a pretext for killing the other under the guise of self-defense, the defendant forfeits his right of self-defense” Elizondo v. State, 487 S.W.3d 185, 196 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016).
Mark Bennett, an astonishingly good Texas criminal defense lawyer did the yeoman’s work of actually posting the jury instructions:
So, even if Foster pointed a gun at Perry, Perry would not be justified in shooting him if his actions, like almost running over his wife, were reasonably calculated to provoke the attack, or if Perry came out there in the hopes of getting to kill someone that day. So when people point to Perry’s social media posts, that isn’t an irrelevant side show or an attempt to punish conservatives for their free speech—it is legally relevant to whether he had a right to self-defense. You can’t shoot the guy you’re mugging and claim self-defense. And you can’t, maybe deliberately, drive your car at a crowd of protesters and then immediately escalate when an armed person tells you to move on.
In other words, this is not some new-fangled rule meant to entrap law-abiding conservatives. It’s a long-standing rule without which the laws of justification would swallow laws against aggravated assault and murder. ‘It is founded upon the theory of estoppel and based upon the legal maxims that, ‘A man may not take advantage of his own wrong to gain favorable interpretation of the law; he seeks the law in vain who offends against it….[O]ne cannot willingly and knowingly bring upon himself the very necessity which he sets up for his own defense.’” Elizondo v. State, 487 S.W.3d 185, 198 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016).
This is not a legally complicated case. The jury could find that Perry was not justified if they believed that Perry provoked the fight to have the excuse to kill someone, or if they believed that the force was not “immediately necessary to protect Perry against Foster’s attempted use of unlawful deadly force” since Foster never actually pointed a weapon at Perry. If Perry argues on appeal that the evidence against him was insufficient, he will probably lose, because Texas courts routinely affirm convictions where there is much stronger evidence of self-defense.
For instance,Texas criminal appeals attorney Doug Gladden pointed to Braughton v. State. A dude, Dominguez, got into a drunken fight with his girlfriend in the middle of the day, as one does. The dude starts riding home on his motorcycle when he encounters the defendants father, and starts revving his engine and tailgating him for some road ragey reason. The father calls his son and says he’s scared. When they get to the front of the defendant’s home, the dude starts screaming and beating the father, even after the defendant says he has a gun. When the dude reaches for his satchel, the defendant shot him. This resulted in a conviction and a sentence of twenty years in jail, and the Court of Appeals said it was fine, over a dissent.
But nobody has talked about pardoning Braughton. Or any of the dozens of other much stronger self-defense cases that have been upheld on appeal. Instead, Texas conservatives have put their shoulder to the wheel for a man who seems to have accelerated his car towards a woman in a wheelchair hoping for the chance to kill someone, and when that woman’s husband told him to get back in his car and move on, murdered him in cold blood.
On these facts. Governor Greg Abbott has promised to issue a pardon.
Not only is this a not particularly sympathetic defendant, but the pardon sends a terrible message. Provoking a fight to kill someone is ok, the pardon will, say, if the right kind of person is killed. And other people who are unduly confident in their knowledge of Texas self-defense law will be tempted to test the limits of the governor’s mercy, to the detriment of the safety of the public.
To the extent that deterrence is a thing, Perry’s conviction serves as a valuable deterrent. It tells people that deadly force is to be used as a last resort, not a test of manhood. And that all lives, even liberal ones, matter in the State of Texas. This pardon would be a baffling exercise of executive discretion.
I sincerely hope that Abbot is simply full of shit. That he will let the appeals process play out, get the unanimous message from the board of pardons that this is not a good candidate for pardon, and accept the decision with some grumbling. Because the alternative is a world where some people’s murders count, and others don’t. Where some people have a right to open carry, and others don’t. That’s not liberty. It’s tyranny.
Let’s hope cooler heads prevail.
When conservatives tell you who they are, believe them. Gov. Abbott will happily pardon this guy and not think twice about it.Report
When conservatives tell you who they are, believe them, unless they say they’re going to review a case. Or they’re saying they’re not racist. Or, actually, don’t believe them about anything, or even listen to them, because they’re lying.Report
I’d add on that this has similarities to the Philando Castile case. The victim was a legal gun owner engaging in “constitutional carry”. Where is the NRA defending the rights of gun owners, the victim, to carry w/o being shot. He has just as much right to carry as the murderer. Doesn’t the NRA care about gun owners being shot down while simply behaving legally? Does the NRA really want gun owners shooting each other wildly?
If he does get a pardon i hope the inevitable civil suit bankrupts him in this life and the next.Report
Well that makes things pretty clear.
The guy who was looking to kill protesters did so. I don’t think we need to go into “who was instigating the fight” thing because Perry shot him before a fight broke out.
This is more, “if/when I instigate a fight he’ll shoot me, so I’d better shoot him first”. And he claims he was drove into the crowd because he was texting (a hooker?) while driving.
This is one of those stupid tribal things where your team decides to back someone because the must be on your team and ergo his actions must be reasonable.
RE: Governor’s Pardon.
Good Grief. I get Team Blue is reporting this as “The Gov will pardon him”, but let’s look at what he’s said he’ll do: Abbott announced Saturday that he has requested that the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles determine if Daniel Perry should be granted a pardon.
That’s not a promise to pardon him, that’s a promise to have professionals review the matter.Report
False:
https://twitter.com/GregAbbott_TX/status/1644778789493243907?s=20Report
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles aren’t professionals; they’re political appointees. appointed by the governor. Same ones who refused to pardon Cameron Todd Willingham, who was shown to have convicted on bogus forensic evidence.Report
Hmm… 6 year terms, 2 year staggered, appointed by the governor but approved by the Senate.
Their chairman doesn’t look like a hack. 33 years in Law Enforcement before being put on the board in 2009, has been Chair since 2015. https://www.tdcj.texas.gov/bpp/brd_members/GutierrezD.html
Willingham’s case gained attention in December 2004, when Maurice Possley and Steve Mills of the Chicago Tribune published on poor investigative tactics.
Willingham was executed on Death Row in February of 2004. The discrediting of the evidence happened after he was dead.
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I guess we’ll see what the board will do, this is a good test to how much a political animal they are. It’s going to be interesting.Report
Where is Richard Widmark when we need him?Report
To paraphrase Adam Serwer, the illogic is the point.
Or rather, as others have pointed out, the illogic is the cigarette being crushed against your forehead, to drive home the point that you are a lesser being unworthy of equal protection.
Does the ruling by Judge K make any sense?
Doesn’t matter, he has the power and will laugh as you sputter and try to use logic against him.
Does this pardon stand up to any sort of legal standard?
Doesn’t matter, the murder victim is a member of the outgroup whose lives don’t matter and Gov. Abbot wants everyone to know it.
No one anywhere is arguing either one of these two things in good faith. They know full well the absurdity of it but again, they have the power and you don’t.
This is what liberals need to grasp, that the Trumps, DeSantises, Abbots, and Kacsmaryks aren’t amenable to negotiation and compromise, even if they are in a tight race. The voting base of the Republican party is demanding a maximalist strategy and will purge any RINOs or dissenters.
The only solution to save democracy and the rule of law is to use whatever tools or means at our disposal to strip them of power.Report
A lot of liberals seem to refuse to grasp it. Willfully so. They would rather do anything than grasp it because liberals want to be a governing party. They don’t want to adopt the attitudes of a revolutionary party, even if absolutely necessary.Report
They can remain a governing party as king as they actually start defending things. Continuing to assume good faith from the opposition is lunacy.Report
What strikes me about this essay is that it feels like it captures a real paradox in a lot of liberals that they are not willing to deal with.
Mr. Fleischman’s job should tell him that institutional failure is a real thing. How often has he seen a client that was wrongfully and/or unfairly convicted because of ambitious prosecutors, lazy cops, “experts” with axes to grind and agendas? Yet, his very job also requires him to believe that the systems and institutions can work and reach the correct result more often than not in the long run. In order to do well for his clients, he needs to believe that the Courts of Appeal and Supreme Courts of the states and nation can be convinced by the truth and evidence. If those fail, there is also the Court of Public Opinion and potentially the Governor and his/her advisors to hear a petition and respond correctly and justly. If he admits that it is just a matter of fancy and not logic, it renders his whole professional life kind of meaningless, right? Were his victories because of the facts and evidence and justice or just random luck and the draw?
A lot of liberals seem to have jobs like this and they also seem to have the attitude of extra special good kids who always did their homework and received nice compliments from the authority figures, teachers, principals, deans, etc. The fact that this could be for naught is a bridge too far.Report
Foster was White.
He’s on the Left, Perry is on the Right: https://www.ktsm.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/38/2020/07/Foter-and-Perry.jpgReport
Looks like you were quick to assume who the “out group” is here based upon the context with a swing and a miss. Try again.Report
Many Sane Americans don’t want to recognize that we are basically in a war and we need to enter a period of general mobilization against Insane America. These are war conditions and we need to act with seriousness and determination in our purpose. Normal life should be suspended until victory is achieved.Report
Claims that the other side is insane predate me and probably go a lot further than that.
1/6 and the associated efforts to overturn the election was a big and serious enough problem that we should be tightening the guild rails. We see some efforts on that and the various lawsuits against Trump and his friends may be fruitful.
The rest of it is pretty normal virtue signaling, human irrationalism, and political grubbiness. Perry shouldn’t get a pardon, but even if he gets one the republic will survive, just like we survived Bill and HRC selling them.
Europe survives having various anti-abortion laws. In practice we’ll end up less restrictive than them after small pharmacies start mailing out those drugs from pro-choice states.
Example: Germany and Hungary legally require “mandatory counseling”. I.e. “biased and directive counselling deliberately intended to influence women’s decision-making and dissuade them from having an abortion.”
https://reproductiverights.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/European-abortion-law-a-comparative-review.pdfReport
The point of the pardon is to send a message to protesters that going to the streets is at their risk and they have been warned. Pretending otherwise is willfully naive but there seem to be lots of willfully naive people in the United States who just don’t want to admit things are really bad and are going to get worse. Admitting that would be depressing so it will not be done.Report
Because the alternative is a world where some people’s murders count, and others don’t.
Yeah, it’d suck if that particular genie left the bottle.Report
It’s out of the bottle, and in the horse that has run through the barn to the back 40.Report
Ah, I live in TX. Abbott is same as Trump – a lying losing whiner. Winning the battle, losing the war.Report
There is no evidence that the Radical Right is going to lose the war. In fact they might win it because the young might be liberal but they don’t vote and our side doesn’t realize the danger that we are in. Instead we put up posters that say “every refugee boat is a Mayflower” and call it a day. If we are feeling especially energetic on a day we might discuss whether it is right to honor the settler-colonialists on the Mayflower like this.Report
It sends exactly the message that they want to send to exactly the people they want to send it to.
There’s a reason that the right always jumps to defending murder done by its own people. (And no, the left doesn’t do the same thing, if anything the left tries to immediately disassociate itself from murderers.)
That’s because the right has been, for decades, slowly building up to political violence as a replacement for actually having the votes to do things. January 6th was just a bit too early for it, called for by someone who is an idiot and doesn’t understand they hadn’t reached that point yet.
Edit: oh, sorry, I forgot that we decided violence also means breaking windows. Let me rephrase: political _killings_ (I would call them murder, but murder implies that they are illegal, and as we can see, they don’t want them to be)Report