AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas Gov. Greg Abbott mentioned Saturday that he’s in search of to pardon a U.S. Military sergeant who was convicted of homicide within the 2020 deadly taking pictures of an armed protester throughout nationwide protests in opposition to police violence and racial injustice.
Abbott tweeted that as a result of the state structure limits him to a pardon solely on a advice by the state Board of Pardons and Paroles he’s asking the board to advocate a pardon and to expedite his request as a way to pardon Sgt. Daniel Perry.
“I stay up for approving the board’s pardon advice as quickly because it hits my desk,” Abbott wrote.
Perry was convicted Friday by a Travis County jury of fatally taking pictures 28-year-old Garrett Foster throughout a protest in Austin. He faces as much as life in jail when sentenced.
“Texas has one of many strongest ‘Stand Your Floor’ legal guidelines of self-defense that can’t be nullified by a jury or a progressive District Lawyer,” Abbott mentioned.
A cellphone name to District Lawyer José Garza’s workplace on Saturday was not answered.
Perry’s attorneys argued that the taking pictures was self-defense as Foster approached Perry’s automobile with an AK-47 rifle. Prosecutors mentioned Perry might have pushed away earlier than firing his revolver and witnesses testified that Foster by no means raised his rifle at Perry.
Perry, who was charged in 2021, was stationed at Ft. Hood about 70 miles (112 kilometers) north of Austin in July 2020 when he was working for a ride-sharing firm and turned onto a road and into a big crowd of demonstrators in downtown Austin.
In video streamed reside on Fb, a automobile may be heard honking earlier than a number of photographs ring out and protesters start screaming and scattering.
When Foster was killed, demonstrators in Austin and past had been marching within the streets for weeks following the police killing of George Floyd.
Floyd died Might 25, 2020, after a Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee in opposition to the Black man’s neck for greater than 9 minutes. Floyd, who was handcuffed, repeatedly mentioned he couldn’t breathe.
Floyd’s killing was recorded on video by a bystander and sparked worldwide protests as a part of a broader reckoning over racial injustice.