Austin: Libertarian BLM Protester Shot Dead

Jury finds Daniel Perry guilty of murder
https://www.statesman.com/story/new...er-garrett-foster-austin-protest/70090982007/
Claire Osborn (07 April 2023)

A Travis County jury on Friday found Uber driver Daniel Perry guilty of murder in the shooting death of Austin protester Garrett Foster in 2020. The jury deliberated 17 hours over two days to reach its decision after an eight-day trial. The jury also found Perry not guilty of an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in connection to driving in front of another protester.

Perry buried his head into the chest of one of his lawyers and sobbed loudly after the verdict was read. Foster's wife, Whitney Mitchell, hugged friends and cried after hearing the verdict.

“We are happy with the verdict and also very sorry for (Perry's) family as well,” Stephen Foster, the victim's father, said outside the courtroom.

Mitchell declined to comment.

Perry's relatives also did not talk to reporters as they rushed out of the courtroom.

Garrett Foster's friends, including several who testified during the trial, also declined to comment outside the courtroom after the verdict.

“I’m grateful to our dedicated career prosecutors and victims’ counselors who tried this case. They worked hard to make a complete and accurate presentation of the facts to the jury,” Travis County District Attorney José Garza said in a statement. “Our hearts continue to break for the Foster family. We hope this verdict brings closure and peace to the victim’s family.”

Judge Clifford Brown said he has time for sentencing hearing on Tuesday, but he will confirm that on Monday with lawyers for both sides.

During closing arguments on Thursday morning, defense attorneys said Perry had no choice but to shoot Garrett Foster five times as he approached Perry’s car with an AK-47 rifle. Prosecutors said Perry had plenty of choices, including driving away before he fired his revolver.

Perry, who is an Army sergeant, was traveling on Fourth Street on the night of July 25, 2020, and turned right onto Congress Avenue, where a Black Lives Matter crowd was marching. Perry stopped, and several protesters approached his car, including Foster, police have said. Protesters have said they feared they were being attacked by someone in a car. Defense lawyers have said Foster, 28, raised his AK-47 at Perry, and that Perry, 37, fired in self-defense.

Whether Perry, fueled by anti-protester beliefs, provoked the shooting by driving into a crowd of marchers or whether Foster pointed his rifle at Perry and Perry fired in self-defense has been at the heart of the much-anticipated trial that began March 28 in Travis County's 147th District Court.

A few witnesses said during the trial that Foster never raised his rifle at Perry. Perry, who did not testify, told police that Foster did. There was no video or photos presented at the trial that showed the position of Foster's rifle when he was shot.

Prosecutor Guillermo Gonzalez said Perry's posts on social media show he clearly had very strong feelings against protesters, including saying that people could get away with shooting them in Texas. He was angry when he turned into the crowd because a woman he wanted to meet up with had texting him asking for money, said Gonzalez.

"This is an age-old story about a man who couldn't keep his anger under control," said Gonzalez. "It's not about police, and it's not about protest marchers." Gonzalez said Perry committed aggravated assault with a deadly weapon by driving into the crowd even though he could clearly see the protesters marching from three different angles before he turned right on Congress Avenue, Gonzalez said.

"Garrett Foster had every right to go up to him and see what the heck was going on and he had every right to do it with a deadly weapon," Gonzalez said.

Defense attorney Doug O'Connell said prosecutors wanted the jury "to believe (Perry) had this evil plan when he turned right."

"The protesters didn't know anything about Perry when they attacked the car and boxed it in," he said, "and Daniel had no choice, and that could have happened to anyone."

O'Connell argued that Foster was dressed for battle at the protest, including wearing a neoprene vest under his T-shirt and carrying an AK-47, a club and a knife. Perry was wearing a T-shirt, shorts and flip-flops, the attorney said.

"Garrett Foster is dressed for war," O'Connell said. "Daniel Perry is dressed for the beach."
 
Prosecutors said Perry had plenty of choices, including driving away before he fired his revolver.

Upon which he would have been arrested for attempted murder of the Marxist maggots, they would have claimed.
 
Last thing I read, he was not being charged... what "changed"? :rolleyes:

There is more to this case than meets the eye. Watch the dashcam footage carefully (left-side):



Perry honks at 0:19. Notice the sprinter (black top, khaki bottoms + knee pads) running flat-out towards Perry's car at 0:21. He is already at full speed by the time he comes into view of the dashcam. Within two seconds of hearing a honk, this man is vectoring at 1-million MPH to Perry's car. Something doesn't add up. Humans do not move/react that fast, especially in such a crowded/busy environment. But you know what does travel faster than human reaction-time? Radios. But even with assistance of radio-comms, the man in the black top and khakis must have been already alerted/vectored towards the intersection as Perry was proceeding around the corner, even before he honked. Based on the timing, that's the only explanation.

Also, notice how the main actors in this scene do not react to the gunfire. The right-side cameraman is particularly telling, he continues to proceed towards Perry's car even after hearing gunfire. The runners who vectored to Perry's car did not even flinch, let alone duck or take cover. This is not the behavior of "volunteer crowd security", this is the behavior of professional operators.

Notice how THE NARRATIVE only works in one direction. If Perry had been at a pro-Trump rally with an AR-15 and signaled a driver who happened to be armed to roll down his window after brandishing the rifle, and had been shot dead, that would not be prosecuted as murder, if at all.

Also note that some Antifa member must have returned fire at Perry, you can hear 3 or 4 reports from their weapon @0:32 (is this person going to be identified and prosecuted? Of course not, because this is Clown World...)

The Left is so eager to score any win, no matter how petty, that they're going to bury themselves alive. I don't think they can even comprehend the Leviathan that they are rousing...
 
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Last thing I read, he was not being charged... what "changed"?

https://twitter.com/greg_price11/status/1644478182697861125
80QZLtV.png
 
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OK, fair enough...law and order that's my middle name. :rolleyes:

I was just coming in here lambaste Abbot and the TX GOP again.

Abbot's finding himself on the front lines of this war, whether he wants to be or not.

Needs to happen to whole lot of other establishment GOP creeps like Mittens or Turtle or the Murk

Texas AG Blasts ‘Soros-Backed’ Travis County DA After Soldier’s Shooting Conviction

https://www.breitbart.com/border/20...county-da-after-soldiers-shooting-conviction/

BOB PRICE 8 Apr 2023

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton blasted Travis County District Attorney José Garza who he described as a “Soros-backed” prosecutor. The attack on the district attorney followed the conviction by a local jury of Army Sergeant Daniel Perry in connection to the shooting death of a Black Lives Matter armed protester in July 2020. Sgt. Perry claimed self-defense in the case.

“Self-defense is a God-given right, not a crime,” Attorney General Paxton told Fox News on Saturday morning. “Unfortunately, the Soros-backed DA in Travis County cares more about the radical agenda of dangerous Antifa and BLM mobs than justice.”

“This week has shown us how rogue prosecutors have weaponized the judicial system,” AG Paxton added. “They must be stopped!”

His comments follow Sgt. Perry’s conviction on Friday by a jury in Travis County on Friday for the shooting death of Garret Foster. Perry claimed Foster pointed an AK-47 at him after protesters stopped his car as he attempted to move through the protest group.

Breitbart News’ Simon Kent reported the shooting which took place on July 25, 2020, during a Black Lives Matter protest in Austin. A Facebook video showed captured the incident but did not make the circumstances leading up to the shooting clear.
 
“This week has shown us how rogue prosecutors have weaponized the judicial system,” AG Paxton added. “They must be stopped!”

Oh there're "rogue prosecutors" on both sides of the isle bucko!

The idiots seeking huge sentences for drugs are just a guilty as the asshole in this case so don't get to feeling all high-n-mighty.
 
You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Anti Federalist again.

OK, fair enough...law and order that's my middle name. :rolleyes:

I was just coming in here lambaste Abbot and the TX GOP again.

I feel you, man. I was pleasantly surprised by this.

(Maybe that whole Tennessee situation is galvanizing some reaction and fortifying some spines.)

Abbot's finding himself on the front lines of this war, whether he wants to be or not.

Needs to happen to whole lot of other establishment GOP creeps like Mittens or Turtle or the Murk

As things come more and more to a head, we'll see more and more separation of the wheat from the chaff. [1]

We'll get mostly chaff, of course - so we can only hope there will be enough wheat [2] left to see things through. [3]

"It is possible we will lose. It is impossible that we must lose. That is the white pill." -- Michael Malice



[1] I was going to say "of the men from the boys", but then I realized I am not a biologist. :eek:

[2] And I just realized I am not a botanist, either - but to hell with it. ;)

[3] I am no apologist for the GOP - almost all of them are useless frauds - but of those who have sufficient position, power, and will to resist the rising tide of woke progressivism, all seem to be Republicans (even though too many of them are mixed bags). That's just an observation, though - not an endorsement of the party. At this point, I don't really give a damn what letter-in-parentheses follows their names - R, D, L, or I - as long as they offer more than just token resistance.
 
Oh there're "rogue prosecutors" on both sides of the isle bucko!

The idiots seeking huge sentences for drugs are just a guilty as the asshole in this case so don't get to feeling all high-n-mighty.

You cannot give Reputation to the same post twice.
 
[3] I am no apologist for the GOP - almost all of them are useless frauds - but of those who have sufficient position, power, and will to resist the rising tide of woke progressivism, all seem to be Republicans (even though too many of them are mixed bags). That's just an observation, though - not an endorsement of the party. At this point, I don't really give a damn what letter-in-parentheses follows their names - R, D, L, or I - as long as they offer more than just token resistance.

We have seen more than enough of what Clown World is hiding behind its mask to say without uncertainty, halting or stuttering that there exists an evil conspiracy within the US which has all but completely taken over all positions of power within this country. It has infiltrated all parties, agencies, bureaucracies at the national level, and many state and local levels, as well, and has likely infiltrated most private organizations with any non-negligible political influence. This means that there are just two types of politicians: Those who are a part of the evil conspiracy, and those who are not. There are any number of ways that those who are not part of the evil conspiracy can make that fact clear, such as opposing the Federal Reserve, proclaiming that Jesus is their Lord, openly contradicting the tsunami of lies that is Wokism, and so on. While no one can be held guilty before the law merely for failing to openly differentiate themselves from the evil conspiracy, I do hold every politician who has not openly opposed it as a possible conspirator, meaning, they are not to be trusted with so much as the office of dog-catcher. Guilty-until-proven-innocent in the court of public opinion, for those who hold power (especially public office), is consistent with the founding values of our country. The Founders were deeply suspicious of power and role-modeled that suspicion to us in many exemplary ways. We ought to learn from them...

image.png
 
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Not giving a penny to that rag to get past their firewall. Lol.


heh...paywall...

Tip: sometimes, you can post the link or title into Google and then click on the three horizontal dots, then expand the more options, and click on the cache button to view it for free.
 
As much as we would all like it to be so, there is no evidence that the quote above is a genuine Washington quote.

https://quoteinvestigator.com/2015/05/26/fire-servant/

Meh, good enough for government work. There are countless misattributed quotes, and the whole rat's nest will never be untangled this side of heaven. Washington was no friend of centralized power and was clearly concordant with the American principle that the citizenry ought to be fundamentally suspicious towards government power, even when the righteous rule and even in times of peace and plenty. The failure of the last few generations of Americans to preserve this undying suspicious of power is what has given us the modern hellscape of Wokism. I'm not saying it's all their fault, only that we are certainly paying some cost for their failure to remain ever-vigilant against secret tyranny and remain maniacally jealous of our liberty...

“In politics as in philosophy, my tenets are few and simple. The leading one of which, and indeed that which embraces most others, is to be honest and just ourselves and to exact it from others, meddling as little as possible in their affairs where our own are not involved. If this maxim was generally adopted, wars would cease and our swords would soon be converted into reap hooks and our harvests be more peaceful, abundant, and happy.”

― George Washington
 
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