According to St. Louis police, two of the 36 arrested were released on summonses, and the remaining charges have been deemed either 'pending application of warrant' or 'refused' for police follow up.
Gardner said of those 36 arrested in two nights, only eight of the cases were referred to her office.
"In yet another misleading attack against me by the local police officer association,
I was accused of letting every single person go who the St. Louis police department arrested for looting and rioting.
To be clear, as of right now, the police department brought to my office a group of 8 individuals involved with stealing for prosecution.
We need the police to bring admissible evidence to charge. My office cannot issue any case when there is not admissible evidence. Point blank.
And if we do issue a case when there is not admissible evidence, that is unethical. And I was assured by the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department that when they have the required admissible evidence, they will bring these cases to my office for prosecution.
I’ve noticed that the Attorney General is tweeting quite a bit about looters and rioters and not about the fact that we have a history of police violence in this city and nation.
And that has caused people to take to the streets yet again to demand accountability and change in our criminal justice system.
It is clear that he does not care about justice or safety or the needs of this community. He just wants to launch a politically motivated attack against me, even if it means misleading and lying to the public.
While the AG continues to fuel the division in the community at a time of great pain, suffering and racial divide, my response to the AG: I got work to do."
Currently neither Gardner or Schmitt have talked to each other.