Black Man Gets 70 Years For Spitting On Cop, Cops Who Murder Blacks Walk Free Without Charge

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The Lubbock jury was urged to con­sid­er a sen­tence that would “send a mes­sage” to Larry Pearson — who had pri­or con­vic­tions for ongo­ing fam­i­ly vio­lence and aggra­vat­ed rob­bery — and society.

A pros­e­cu­tor said she is mak­ing an exam­ple out of a Texas man who received a 70-year sen­tence for spit­ting on a police offi­cer dur­ing an arrest.

Jurors in Lubbock County hand­ed the lengthy sen­tence to Larry Pearson, 36, on Tuesday after find­ing him guilty of two counts of harass­ing a pub­lic ser­vant the day before. According to the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, typ­i­cal prison sen­tences for harass­ing a pub­lic ser­vant range from two to 10 years.

However, Pearson’s two pri­or felony con­vic­tions — for aggra­vat­ed rob­bery and con­tin­u­ous fam­i­ly vio­lence in 2009 and 2019, respec­tive­ly — increased the range of his penal­ty to 25 years to life in prison

Texas man 70 years spit on officers
Larry Pearson (cen­ter), 36, received a 70-year prison sen­tence after being con­vict­ed of harass­ing a pub­lic ser­vant when he spat on police offi­cers in Lubbock County, Texas, dur­ing his arrest last spring. (Photo: Screenshot/YouTube.com/Everything Lubbock)

We asked [the jury] to just con­sid­er the life that he’d been lead­ing,” pros­e­cu­tor Jessica Gorman said, the Avalanche-Journal reported.

Gorman empha­sized that the sen­tence would not have been as sub­stan­tial for some­one with no crim­i­nal history.

But I think the rea­son for that enhance­ment being the law is if you’re going to choose to live a life of crime and to be a crim­i­nal, you can do that around oth­er crim­i­nals in prison and not in a free soci­ety with law-abid­ing peo­ple,” she said.

According to the Avalanche-Journal, a Lubbock police report detailed how a woman flagged down an offi­cer in north­east Lubbock in April 2022 to report Pearson, who was a pas­sen­ger in her car, for domes­tic abuse.

The report not­ed that the vic­tim had “mul­ti­ple vis­i­ble injuries” on her face as she informed the offi­cers that Pearson had a weapon — which turned out to be an air­soft gun — and had hit her sev­er­al times

The uniden­ti­fied woman claimed Pearson stopped assault­ing her when they reached the near­by inter­sec­tion after he saw a police car. After pass­ing it, Pearson threat­ened her again, she said. “You know you have an a– whoop­ing com­ing,” he report­ed­ly warned her before punch­ing her again, for the third time, in her face.

Pearson alleged­ly became angry that offi­cers arrest­ed him rather than the vic­tim after back­up arrived, prompt­ing him to kick at their vehi­cle doors. Gorman said he spat at author­i­ties when they opened the door to order him to stop kicking.

Pearson report­ed­ly con­tin­ued to spit and resist after being tak­en to the Lubbock County Detention Center.

During the final argu­ments of the sen­tenc­ing phase of Pearson’s tri­al, KLBK News report­ed, pros­e­cu­tor Gorman urged the jury to con­sid­er a pun­ish­ment that would “send a mes­sage” to him and society.

Defense attor­ney Jim Shaw told the jury that the sen­tence was inflict­ed for a “sim­ple mis­de­meanor” in a sit­u­a­tion that “got out of con­trol.” Gorman, how­ev­er, dis­agreed. “In Texas, if you’ve been to prison mul­ti­ple times, two con­sec­u­tive times and then you com­mit anoth­er felony that’s a third degree or high­er, you’re what’s called a ‘habit­u­al­ized crim­i­nal,’” Gorman con­tend­ed, the Avalanche-Journal report­ed, “where your min­i­mum is 25 years.”