The Republican governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, on Thursday pardoned a man convicted last year for the murder of a protester during the major mobilizations of 2020 against racism and police violence.
Daniel Perry, a soldier currently aged 37 who drove VTCs in his spare time, found himself in the middle of a crowd of demonstrators in Austin, capital of this southern state, on July 25, 2020.
His lawyers had pleaded self-defense. They said he fired a pistol five times at Garrett Foster, 28, because the latter approached his vehicle and pointed an assault rifle in his direction.
The prosecution claimed that he could have turned around, but that he took the initiative to confront this demonstrator, also white.
Daniel Perry was sentenced on April 7, 2023 to 25 years in prison, but even before he appealed, Governor Abbott announced that he had asked the Texas pardons commission to study his case.
He explained that he wanted to enforce the Texas law “Stand your ground”, one of the most extensive in the United States in terms of self-defense, which authorizes a person to use lethal force if they consider themselves seriously in danger, even if there is another possibility of escaping this danger.
The Pardons Commission announced Thursday that it had, after a “meticulous examination” of all the documents in the file, “voted unanimously to recommend a total pardon” of the condemned “and the restoration” of his “right to the port of ‘armed”.
The governor announced in a press release that he was following the Commission’s recommendations and praised the law “which cannot be overturned either by a jury or by a progressive prosecutor.”
In his clemency order, he criticizes the county prosecutor, accusing him of his policy of “reducing access to firearms” and his conduct of the investigation.