Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

St. Louis Couple Who Pointed Guns At Protesters Reportedly Sued To Keep Gays Out Of Their Neighborhood

St. Louis Couple Who Pointed Guns At Protesters Reportedly Sued To Keep Gays Out Of Their Neighborhood
xshularx/Twitter

Mark and Patricia McCloskey, the St. Louis lawyer couple who went viral for pointing a pistol and an assault weapon at peaceful Black Lives Matter protestors from the front lawn of their home, are once again in the news as more details emerge about their past.

Specifically, a history of virulent homophobia: In 1992, they sued their neighborhood trustees for allowing gay couples to live in their neighborhood.


The lawsuit was ostensibly filed against the trustees for not enforcing one of the written rules of their gated community, which required that the neighborhood be home only to "single-family residences," which the rules defined as residences inhabited by married couples.

As same-sex marriage was not yet legal in Missouri in 1992, this rule would exclude gay couples. But the McCloskeys insisted it wasn't a homophobic rule, because straight unwed couples would be excluded too.

Mark McCloskey then accused the neighborhood of trying to politicize the issue. As he put it at the time:

“Certain people on Portland Place, for political reasons, wanted to make it a gay issue."

The McCloskeys went so far as to appeal their case all the way to the Missouri state Supreme Court, an effort that failed. Patricia McCloskey was subsequently impeached as a neighborhood trustee over what her fellow trustees saw as an overt attempt to codify homophobia into the neighborhood.

The incident is just one of a litany of lawsuits filed by the McCloskeys recently uncovered in a recent exposé in local newspaper The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. As the report details, the McCloskeys have a long history of using the court system to fight and intimidate--including suing Mark McCloskey's own father and sister.

As the Post-Dispatch put it:

"... public records and interviews reveal... the McCloskeys are almost always in conflict with others."

On Twitter, most people were disgusted by the McCloskeys' homophobia, but certainly not surprised.










Their litigious nature is just the latest chapter in the McCloskeys' infamy since their gun-toting Black Lives Matter encounter: in the wake of the incident, the compared BLM to "the storming of the Bastille" during the French Revolution, and they have been the subject of countless mocking memes.

More from Trending

group of men; Silverback gorilla
Sean Murphy/Getty Images; JOSE JORDAN/AFP via Getty Images

Viral Tweet Claiming That 100 Unarmed Men Could Beat A Single Gorilla Sparks Heated Debate

In the early morning hours of Friday, April 25, X user DreamChasnMike posited the outcome of a showdown between Homo sapiens sapiens and one of our closest relatives.

Or rather 100 men versus one of our fellow primates.

Keep Reading Show less
GOP Lawmaker Dragged After Admitting He Has No Evidence Of Student 'Furries' Using Litter Boxes

GOP Lawmaker Dragged After Admitting He Has No Evidence Of Student 'Furries' Using Litter Boxes

Texas Republican state Representative Stan Gerdes admitted on Wednesday that a bill he sponsored served no purpose and addressed an issue that never existed in American schools.

His bill, HB54, would ban "furries" from classrooms. Furries are a subculture that enjoys dressing up and acting like non-human animals.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Win McNamee/Getty Images

The White House Now Has Its Own News Website—And People Are Calling It Out For What It Is

Critics called out the Trump administration for running its own propaganda network after the White House publicized "White House Wire," its own news website that features news articles from conservative news outlets like the Daily Caller and Fox News.

The White House Wire (WHWIRE) primarily features positive coverage of the president and administration, with stories mainly sourced from conservative outlets and contributions from government staffers. One early headline, "100 Days Of Hoaxes: Cutting Through The Fake News," was notable but did not include a direct link to a story.

Keep Reading Show less
A young blonde woman in a black suit sits at her desk, her laptop is open and she is staring off in deep thought, she seems a bit perplexed.
Photo by Magnet.me on Unsplash

People Reveal The Pettiest Reason They Stopped Sleeping With Someone

Some sexual encounters you remember for life for the wrong reason.

That's why people should come with warning labels.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Donald Trump
Fox News

Trump Suggests Kids Will Just Have To Deal With Having A Lot Fewer Toys Due To His Tariffs

President Donald Trump was criticized for his response to concerns about empty store shelves due to his tariffs, suggesting that children will just have to settle for "two dolls instead of 30," and that those dolls might cost more than they used to.

U.S. businesses are already canceling orders from China and delaying expansion plans as they brace for the fallout from Trump’s trade policies.

Keep Reading Show less