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Silent Ban Alleged: Fallon Freezes Griffin?
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Silent Ban Alleged: Fallon Freezes Griffin?

A comic who once posed with a fake severed Trump head now says she is “too controversial” for Jimmy Fallon’s couch — while the show stays silent. Story Snapshot Kathy Griffin says she is informally banned from Jimmy Fallon’s Tonight Show for being “too inappropriate or too controversial.” Her claim comes after years of real bans and blacklists across late-night TV, including a long ban under Jay Leno. No hard evidence shows a new official Fallon-era ban, yet Griffin has not been invited in more than a decade. The fight highlights how big media picks who gets a voice, while edgy critics get pushed to the sidelines. Kathy Griffin’s new “ban” claim and why it matters Comedian Kathy Griffin went on Instagram and told fans she believes she is banned from The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon because she is “inappropriate, or too controversial.” She said she has not done Fallon’s show since it aired after midnight, back when he hosted Late Night rather than the main Tonight Show. Her last Tonight Show appearance came in 2013, during Jay Leno’s second run as host, and she has not been booked in the years since Fallon took over. Griffin used this gap to argue that the show has quietly blacklisted her, even as it welcomes guests she sees as far more troubling. She knocked the program for “glorifying” figures like Donald Trump and mixed martial arts fighter Conor McGregor, who was found civilly liable for sexual assault in 2024. To Griffin, that double standard sends a loud message: big networks will platform powerful men with checkered pasts but freeze out a loud female critic who crossed the line with a brutal joke. A long history of bans, blacklists, and outrage Griffin’s new claim fits her long record of running into real bans on major shows. Entertainment roundups note she was “famously banned” from The Tonight Show with Jay Leno after making jokes about him that he found offensive. She has been banned or informally blocked from other programs over the years, including The View and CNN’s New Year’s Eve broadcast, where she lost her co-host role after the 2017 photo showing her holding a fake severed head of President Trump. These incidents built her image as a comic who says what she wants and pays the price. Lists of “banned late-night celebrities” often put Griffin next to names like Howard Stern, Joan Rivers, and others who clashed with hosts or standards. One Facebook summary notes that her Trump head photo led to bans from “multiple shows.” Griffin herself seems to lean into this outlaw brand. She jokes about getting kicked off sets, talks openly about being blocked, and treats those punishments as proof she is fighting the powerful. For many viewers on both left and right who distrust Hollywood and the media, that kind of story feels believable. What the records say about Fallon’s show Here is where things get messy. Several entertainment sites say Jimmy Fallon did not keep Leno’s old Kathy Griffin ban once he took over Tonight. A BuzzFeed rundown reports that Fallon “officially lifted” her ban in his first episode as host and invited her back in 2014, describing it as her first appearance in decades. Another outlet, Nicki Swift, likewise says the ban ended when Fallon took the chair and that she joined him on the show that year. A Tonight Show guest list article even states that Griffin “hasn’t gotten herself banned” from Fallon’s version of the program. At the same time, no public records from NBC, Fallon, or his producers confirm or deny Griffin’s new 2026 claim of being too controversial for the show. There is no press release, booking memo, or direct statement spelling out that she is banned now, and the show has not answered her comments on air. All we really know is that she appeared under Leno, had at least one invite tied to Fallon’s takeover according to secondary sources, and has not sat on Fallon’s couch in more than ten years. The gap looks strange to fans, but silence makes it hard to prove either side’s case. Gatekeeping, “controversy,” and a broken trust in elites Griffin’s complaint taps into a wider anger many Americans feel toward big media and the so-called “elites.” Late-night shows were once places where oddballs, sharp comics, and political outsiders could speak to the whole country. Now, booking choices often favor safe stars, corporate partners, and politicians who fit the story a network wants to sell. Lists of banned guests show how easily hosts and producers can erase someone from the spotlight for crossing unwritten lines, with no court case and no public vote. “What Kind Of Message Are We Sending Here?!”: Kathy Griffin Has Slammed Jimmy Fallon’s Double Standards As She Claimed She’s Banned From “The Tonight Show” While Conor McGregor Was Welcomed As A Guest “I think it sends yet another message to women… https://t.co/N7e4nSXYjL pic.twitter.com/HrehoOrUBB — Quick News Bites (@netiblogpro) July 1, 2026 When Griffin says she is “too inappropriate” for Fallon but the show gladly welcomes a former president and a fighter found liable for sexual assault, she is pointing at that quiet system. People on the right may see hypocrisy in how networks punish a comic image of Trump yet still chase his ratings. People on the left may notice how claims of sexual harm do not block a famous athlete from being honored on stage. Both sides see one thing in common: the rules for who gets a voice are set by a small club at the top, and those rules change when money or power is involved. What this small story signals about the bigger system The Kathy Griffin–Jimmy Fallon dust-up may sound like Hollywood gossip, but it hints at larger problems. In politics, news, and entertainment, insiders can shut out people who make them uncomfortable while claiming it is only about “standards” or “brand safety.” There is rarely a clear process or fair hearing. Instead, decisions happen in private meetings, and viewers are told after the fact that someone is “too controversial.” Whether you like or dislike Griffin, that should raise concerns about transparency. Griffin’s history shows she often goes too far, and many Americans were disgusted by the fake Trump head photo. Yet the deeper issue is who decides when “too far” means you never get heard again, and why that label seems to hit some people harder than others. In an era when trust in government, media, and big business keeps falling, stories like this remind us that gatekeepers still hold the mic — and they rarely have to explain themselves to the public they serve. Sources: pagesix.com, youtube.com, lastnighton.com, neontommy.com, buzzfeed.com, facebook.com, instagram.com

50 Cent Torches Smollett Comeback
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50 Cent Torches Smollett Comeback

50 Cent turned Jussie Smollett’s Harlem Pride return into another round of public ridicule, and the fight over that moment says as much about trust as it does about fame. Quick Take 50 Cent mocked Smollett after a Harlem Pride performance that marked a rare stage return.[1][2] The rapper tied his jab to the long-running Power versus Empire rivalry.[1][2] Smollett’s past Chicago legal case still shapes how many people read his comeback.[1][8] The Illinois Supreme Court overturned his conviction on procedural grounds, but did not clear his name.[14][15] 50 Cent Reopens an Old Feud 50 Cent posted a mocking response after Smollett performed at Harlem Pride over the weekend. In the post, the rapper used his familiar Power versus Empire theme and blamed viewers for choosing the rival show. The jab landed fast because it mixed entertainment gossip with a controversy that has followed Smollett for years.[1][2] Hot 97 reported that Smollett’s Harlem Pride appearance was his first live performance in eight years and drew cheers from the crowd. That reaction matters because it shows two different truths at once. Some people saw a comeback and a show of support. Others saw a target for renewed mockery, especially given Smollett’s long history of public backlash.[2] Why the Backstory Still Drives the Story Smollett’s 2019 case remains the core reason this reaction keeps resurfacing. The user-provided research says he was convicted of felony disorderly conduct after police determined the hate crime report was staged, and he was sentenced to probation, jail time, and restitution. That history gives critics a ready-made frame, while supporters argue the legal record is more complicated than the headlines suggest.[1] The complication came in November 2024, when the Illinois Supreme Court overturned the conviction on procedural grounds. According to the supplied research, the court said retrying Smollett after he had already completed community service and reached a dismissal deal violated due process. The same research also notes that the court did not decide whether he was innocent or guilty on the facts.[14][15] What the Harlem Pride Reaction Reveals The response to Smollett shows how celebrity cases can stay stuck between legal rulings and public memory. Fans in the room cheered, while social media quickly turned the performance into a new argument about credibility, forgiveness, and attention. That split helps explain why the story keeps moving, even years after the original Chicago case faded from daily news.[2] 50 Cent had a few words for Jussie Smollett for pride month pic.twitter.com/wHyJaeM6Ca — streetaddictz.net (@streetaddictz) June 30, 2026 The bigger lesson is not about one rapper or one actor. It is about how quickly public trust breaks when legal cases, online mockery, and media framing collide. In a country already fed up with polished narratives, this kind of story lands because many readers see the same pattern again: elites, celebrities, and institutions fighting over the story while ordinary people are left to sort out what still feels true. Sources: [1] Web – 50 Cent pokes fun at Jussie Smollett’s return to the stage for Harlem … [2] Web – 50 Cent mocks Jussie Smollett after pride performance in Harlem [8] Web – 50 Cent Is Completely Unimpressed by Jussie Smollett’s Harlem … [14] Web – Why Donald Trump and Jussie Smollett were not ‘exonerated … [15] YouTube – Jussie Smollett’s attorney speaks after HATE CRIME …

ICE Killing Sparks Million-Dollar Reward
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ICE Killing Sparks Million-Dollar Reward

A federal agent shot a mother in the head, was praised as a hero, became a millionaire—and still has not been charged or fired. Story Snapshot ICE agent Jonathan Ross killed 37-year-old Renee Good at point-blank range during an immigration operation in Minneapolis. Top federal officials labeled Good a “domestic terrorist” and claimed self-defense within hours, before full evidence was public. Multiple video analyses and legal experts say the footage does not show Good trying to run Ross over or attacking agents. Ross remains uncharged and employed while raising over $1 million online, deepening fears that federal agents are “above the law.” How the Shooting of Renee Good Unfolded On January 7, 2026, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, a 37‑year‑old mother of three, in her SUV on a snowy street in Minneapolis. Good had parked sideways and was filming an ICE operation, along with her partner. Ross walked around her vehicle while recording her with his phone. In the video, Good tells him, “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad at you,” sounding calm, not violent or enraged.[2][4][9] As more agents closed in, one yelled for Good to “get out of the f**king car,” while her partner filmed and challenged Ross to “show your face.” Good then began to reverse and turn her wheel to the right, apparently trying to leave the tense scene, not drive straight into anyone. Ross moved in front of the SUV and then to the driver’s side. He fired three shots at point‑blank range—first through the windshield, then into the open driver’s window—killing Good in her seat.[2][9] The Official Story vs. What Videos Show Within about two hours of the shooting, the Department of Homeland Security declared that Ross had acted in self‑defense and accused Good of “an act of domestic terrorism,” claiming she tried to run agents over with her vehicle. President Donald Trump amplified this narrative, saying on social media that she had “viciously run over” an agent and framing Ross’s actions as justified self‑protection. These sweeping claims came before the public had seen Ross’s video or key evidence from the scene.[1][2][9] Later video reviews tell a very different story. A series of forensic analyses, including work highlighted by Slate and other outlets, find no clear visual proof that Good ran over Ross or used her car as a weapon. One detailed breakdown concludes Ross fired from the front‑left of the car as Good turned away, and then from a position nearly perpendicular to the SUV, shooting into the driver’s window at extremely close range. A former New York City Police Department lieutenant who examined the phone footage said, “I don’t hear threatening behavior” from Good and called Ross’s actions “a travesty.”[1][6][7][8] Why Ross Hasn’t Been Charged or Fired Many Americans ask how an agent can shoot an unarmed woman in the head and still avoid charges or firing. The answer lies in the special legal shield federal officers often enjoy. Under the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause, state prosecutors can be blocked from pursuing cases if a judge decides the officer acted within the scope of federal duties and in a way that was “necessary and proper.” Legal experts say this protection is broad and can shut down state homicide charges even when the facts are contested.[2][3] At the same time, the Trump administration controls federal prosecutors who would normally decide whether to bring a case against Ross. Reporting indicates the administration has withheld key evidence from Minnesota investigators and is unlikely to charge one of its own agents. National analyses of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and related agencies show a sharp rise in use‑of‑force incidents in Trump’s second term, even as internal watchdog offices are weakened and civil‑rights investigators are sidelined. In this environment, federal agents can kill civilians and face little or no discipline, feeding the belief that there is one justice system for ordinary people and another for government insiders.[2][12][14][19] A Million‑Dollar Fundraiser and Public Outrage Ross’s case has stirred anger not only because he remains uncharged, but also because he has profited from the killing. Crowdfunding campaigns reportedly raised more than $1 million for him, despite rules that are supposed to block fundraisers tied to possible violent crimes. Supporters frame him as a victim of “anti‑police” sentiment and donate as a show of solidarity. For many others, this looks like a reward for deadly force and a signal that some officers can gain fame and fortune after taking a life.[4] Paigelynne Gonyea is a poll worker in Syracuse, New York. On Election Day Tuesday, two ICE agents called her, asked to meet, showed up at her polling place with copies of her social media posts and her driver's license, and handed her a warning notice about an investigation into… https://t.co/KLdTaGZriR pic.twitter.com/2unNYgdMXr — Mike Young (@micyoung75) June 29, 2026 For conservatives, this story hits long‑standing worries about a federal government that promises border security but instead creates unaccountable armed bureaucracies. For liberals, it confirms fears about harsh enforcement, racial bias, and a system that protects agents when they kill. In the middle, everyday Americans see a mother dead in her car, videos that clash with the official story, and a government that moves faster to defend its own than to release evidence or seek justice. The case of Renee Good has become a symbol of a deeper problem: when those in power can rewrite reality in real time, ordinary citizens are left wondering whether the law still applies to the people who carry guns and badges. Sources: [1] Web – CATO Simp Notes That Agent Who Shot Renee Good Has Never Been Charged … [2] Web – How ICE Agent Who Killed Renee Good Could Face State Charges [3] YouTube – Lawfare Daily: Can Minnesota Prosecute ICE Agent Jonathan Ross? [4] Web – Does ICE agent in Renee Good’s shooting have “absolute immunity … [6] Web – A Supreme Court precedent illuminates why the shooting of Good by … [7] YouTube – Newly released video shows Minneapolis shooting from ICE agent’s … [8] Web – Who decides if ICE agent Jonathan Ross will face charges for the … [9] Web – ICE Shot And Killed Her. Was It Murder? (Spoiler: YES!!!) : … [12] Web – Reports, videos show how ICE agent Jonathan Ross fatally shot … [14] Web – Jonathan Ross, the ICE agent who shot and killed Renee Good in … [19] Web – What We Know About How ICE is Being Trained on the Use of Force

Warnock Torches Homophobia—Backlash Erupts
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Warnock Torches Homophobia—Backlash Erupts

When a sitting U.S. senator calls transphobia “violence against divinity,” it exposes how deeply faith, identity, and raw political power are now colliding — and how far Washington’s culture wars have drifted from the everyday struggles of ordinary Americans. Story Snapshot Senator Raphael Warnock tells a Los Angeles synagogue that transphobia, homophobia, and anti‑Semitism offend the “glory of God.”[1] He calls the Black church “as homophobic as anybody,” admitting deep problems inside his own religious community.[4] Conservative outlets blast his comments as extreme, while wider faith debates over transgender rights grow more intense.[4][7] The clash highlights a bigger problem: leaders use religion to fight culture wars while core economic and social crises go unaddressed.[8][9][10] Warnock’s Sermon: Transphobia as ‘Violence Against Divinity’ Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat from Georgia and longtime Baptist pastor, recently preached at IKAR, a progressive Jewish community in Los Angeles. In that sermon, he told worshippers that transphobia, homophobia, and anti‑Semitism are “violence not only against humanity but against divinity” and “an offense to the glory of God.” He argued that every person carries a spark of the divine, so attacking people for their identity is a direct insult to God’s image in them.[1] Warnock asked Jews, Black Christians, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer communities to stand together against hate. He said faith communities should unite to push back on bigotry instead of staying silent or looking away. He tied this message to the civil rights legacy, pointing to past efforts where religious leaders crossed lines of race and religion to fight injustice for ordinary people.[1] Calling Out the Black Church and Religious Hypocrisy In his talk with Rabbi Sharon Brous after the sermon, Warnock said the Black church has “grappling” to do on issues like homophobia and sexism. In other moments he has gone further, saying that church is “as homophobic as anybody,” signaling that the problem is inside his own tradition, not just in other groups. He admitted he has had to “chasten” people in his community who hold hostile views toward lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people.[2][4] Warnock also linked his religious message to politics, warning against leaders who quote the Bible while cutting help for the poor. He cited the prophet Isaiah’s line about God not enduring “solemn assemblies with iniquity” to attack lawmakers who hold prayer breakfasts while slashing social programs. For many Americans, left and right, this hits a nerve: politicians talk about faith and values, yet seem more focused on reelection, donors, and culture‑war points than on fixing broken schools, high living costs, and a shrinking middle class.[1] Media Backlash and the Wider Faith Fight Over Trans Rights Conservative outlets quickly seized on Warnock’s remarks, presenting them as proof that Democratic leaders and progressive clergy have gone off the deep end. The Gateway Pundit framed his claim that transphobia is an “offense to the glory of God” as part of a radical agenda and mocked the very word “transphobia.” Commentators like the Hodge Twins dismissed the idea that transgender issues should concern the church at all, focusing on broad rejection rather than his specific theological argument.[4][5][7] These reactions are part of a larger faith battle over transgender rights that has been building for years. Conservative religious groups have backed or cheered more than one hundred state bills since 2021 that limit transgender people’s access to sports, health care, and legal recognition. Progressive pastors, rabbis, and other leaders have responded by marching, speaking, and preaching that discrimination against transgender people violates core religious commands to love and protect vulnerable neighbors. Ordinary believers are caught in the middle, watching both sides invoke God while many day‑to‑day needs remain unmet.[2][8][9][10][14] What This Reveals About Power, Religion, and a Distrusted Government Research shows that strong religious identity often links to higher levels of prejudice against transgender people, especially in groups that stress strict gender roles and literal readings of scripture. At the same time, other Christians and Jews argue that defending transgender rights fits their faith’s call to justice and mercy, and they see laws against transgender people as political theater that harms real families. Warnock’s stance sits firmly in this progressive camp, using faith to condemn anti‑trans attitudes as both moral wrong and spiritual offense.[1][2][3][13][14] READ NOW: Sen. Raphael Warnock Tells L.A. Synagogue: The Black Church Is 'Homophobic,' and Transphobia Is 'Violence Against Divinity' — Senator Raphael Warnock (D-GA) addressed the IKAR synagogue in Los Angeles and used the opportunity to…https://t.co/4iNcIk203M — Top News by CPAC (@TopNewsbyCPAC) June 29, 2026 For many Americans, both conservative and liberal, this latest fight confirms a deeper worry: powerful people now use religion as just another weapon in the culture war. While leaders trade blows over how to talk about transgender identity, the federal government still struggles with debt, inflation, border security, health care, and the growing gap between rich and poor. Many feel that elites in politics, media, and big institutions talk endlessly about identity battles but rarely deliver on the basic promise that hard work should lead to a stable, decent life.[8][11][12] Sources: [1] Web – Dem Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia Claims Transphobia is ‘An … [2] YouTube – Guest Sermon from Reverend Senator Raphael Warnock | 6.27.2026 [3] Web – Raphael Warnock Democratic National Convention 2024 | Rev [4] Web – Warnock Calls Affordability Crisis a “Spiritual Crisis” in Landmark … [5] Web – Senator Raphael Warnock stirring victory speech, video and … [7] Web – Reverend Raphael Warnock and Rabbi Sharon Brous in Conversation [8] Web – How do you hold hands with your fellow legislators in prayer and … [9] YouTube – Rabbi Sharon Brous and Reverend Senator Raphael Warnock in … [10] Web – As we approach the 250th anniversary of our founding, I’ve been … [11] Web – Join Rabbi Sharon Brous in conversation with Raphael Warnock … [12] YouTube – Sen Warnock Drops BOMBSHELL On Church’s ‘Secrets’ In New … [13] Web – Sen. Raphael Warnock Tells L.A. Synagogue: The Black Church Is … [14] Web – Dem Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia Claims Transphobia is …

Gun Case Vanishes — Fallout Explodes
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Gun Case Vanishes — Fallout Explodes

When a Missouri court wiped away the McCloskeys’ gun case “as if it never happened,” it quietly exposed how power, politics, and fear can twist basic rights on both sides of the street. Story Snapshot The St. Louis couple who pointed guns at 2020 protesters fought nearly five years to get one rifle back. They pleaded guilty, surrendered their weapons, were pardoned, then later won full expungement and rights restoration. State officials, media, and courts clashed over self-defense, property rights, and public safety in a gated neighborhood. The long battle shows how ordinary people can be crushed between protest politics and an aggressive justice system. How a Viral Image Turned Into Years of Court Fights On June 28, 2020, Mark and Patricia McCloskey stepped outside their St. Louis home in a gated private neighborhood as racial justice protesters walked through on their way to the mayor’s house.[1] Cellphone video showed Mark holding an AR-15-style rifle and Patricia waving a handgun, both facing the crowd.[3] No shots were fired and no one was hurt, but the clip raced across national media and social networks, turning the couple into instant symbols in the culture war.[3] Days later, St. Louis police executed search warrants and seized the couple’s firearms in connection with the incident.[1] St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner then charged both with felony unlawful use of a weapon, saying they displayed guns “readily capable of lethal use” in an “angry or threatening manner.”[4] For many viewers, the images looked like reckless intimidation. For many homeowners, the same images looked like frightened citizens defending their property when officials could not be trusted to keep order. Guilty Pleas, Pardons, and the Question of Rights In June 2021, the McCloskeys pleaded guilty to reduced misdemeanor charges. Mark admitted to fourth-degree assault for threatening passersby with the rifle, and Patricia admitted to harassment.[3] They agreed to surrender the very guns they had held in the video.[3] Missouri Governor Mike Parson later pardoned both in July 2021, wiping away the convictions and restoring “all rights of citizenship forfeited by said conviction,” including their right to own firearms under state law.[5] The couple argued that this pardon should clear their record and force the government to return their seized rifle.[1] Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt stepped in on their side, filing a brief that said prosecuting the McCloskeys violated their right to bear arms and defend their property under the state’s castle doctrine law.[4] He warned that cases like this send a message that citizens may be jailed for using guns to protect their homes.[4] Legal analysts pushed back, saying self-defense is not a blank check and that brandishing guns is only justified when the threat is real and serious.[6] That split captured a growing worry on both left and right: who decides when fear is “reasonable,” and whose fear matters most? Expungement, Rifle Return, and Media Framing After the pardon, a Missouri disciplinary official asked the state Supreme Court to suspend the couple’s law licenses, arguing their crimes showed “indifference to public safety” and moral failings.[8] Major outlets repeatedly called them the “gun-waving couple” who “menaced” protesters, cementing a negative image in the public mind.[3] Supporters said this language ignored that no one was injured and that the protest had entered a gated private street shared by residents who already lived behind walls out of fear of crime and unrest.[12] In 2024, the McCloskeys asked a court to expunge their criminal records. A judge granted the request in June, and a Missouri appeals court later confirmed that expungement made the case legally “as though the incident never happened.”[1] That ruling restored rights they had lost as criminals, including the right to recover the weapons used in 2020.[1] After three lawsuits, two trips to the Court of Appeals, and 1,847 days, St. Louis police finally returned Mark’s AR-15 rifle in mid-2025.[4] For their supporters, that was proof the system had overreached and then quietly backed down. What This Fight Reveals About Power, Fear, and the “Castle” The clash in St. Louis took place inside a gated community, the kind of walled neighborhood many Americans choose because they fear rising crime and social unrest.[12] Scholars say these communities often deepen separation and suspicion, drawing like-minded residents who want walls to keep “outsiders” away.[13] When protests enter those spaces, homeowners may feel the government has failed to keep the peace and that they must defend their “castle” themselves. Protesters, meanwhile, see public streets and constitutional rights, not a private fortress that shuts them out. The McCloskey case shows how quickly basic rights can get tangled when politics and media heat up. Police had warrants and a legal basis to seize the guns, yet years later courts said the record should be erased and the guns returned.[1] The couple did break the law under Missouri’s rules, but they were also pardoned and expunged, then dragged through more litigation before they could reclaim their property.[3] For many Americans, the lesson is grim but familiar: when elites and institutions fight over symbolism, regular people become pawns, and the promise of equal justice behind those gates feels more like an illusion than a guarantee. Sources: [1] Web – One of the defining images of 2020 featured two homeowners, two … [3] Web – Mark and Patricia McCloskey: What really went on in St Louis … – BBC [4] Web – Court asked to suspend law licenses of gun-waving couple – OPB [5] Web – McCloskeys reclaim AR-15 rifle after yearslong legal battle in St. … [6] Web – The Couple Who Waved Guns At BLM Protesters Plead Guilty … – NPR [8] Web – Mark McCloskey pardoned after pointing guns at protesters [12] Web – Search and Seizure Laws in Missouri Explained – Scrivner Law Firm [13] Web – Search & Seizure: A Criminal Defense for Drug Possession