It’s Not the Heat. It’s the Homophobia.
July is apparently Hate Month across America. Is it just me, or is the summer heat really bringing out America’s inner bigot? Maybe it’s not the heat. It’s the homophobia. I submit to you evidence of the rising fever of intolerance toward gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender persons:
Here in Georgia, news broke this week of the firings of two public servants: a transgender woman and a lesbian. On Tuesday, former Sandy Springs Police Lieutenant Trudi Vaughan told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that she was fired because she was female and gay. Apparently you have to be male and heterosexual to properly fulfill Vaughan’s role as the supervisor of the city’s special operations officers, including the narcotics, anti-gang and SWAT teams. She was fired on July 16 and announced her intention to contest her termination and file a lawsuit claiming discrimination on July 22.

Vandy Beth Glen
The very next day, Lambda Legal issued a press release announcing its intent to sue the Georgia General Assembly’s Office of Legislative Council on behalf of Vandy Beth Glen, a transgender woman, who was fired after two years of service as a legal editor and proofreader. The federal lawsuit asserts that Glenn was fired in violation of the Constitution’s equal protection guarantee, because it treated her differently due to her female gender identity and her nonconformity with gender stereotypes. Glen told her supervisor, who told Legislative Counsel Sewell Brumby. Brumby reportedly fired Glenn, telling her that her gender identity disorder was “immoral” and her presence in the office would make other employees “uncomfortable.” (Read my post on Glen’s firing for more detail.) But it’s not just Georgia suffering from summer homophobia and transphobia. It gets worse.
Just over the Georgia state line in Anderson, South Carolina, an 18-year-old went to the Anderson County Sheriff’s office and filed two complaints against his father on Wednesday, July 16. Referred to only as “the teen” in an article published in the Independent Mail, his incident report stated that he was punched by his father Wednesday afternoon. He had returned home to get some clothes. He had left the house on P Street Sunday, July 13, after his father attacked him with a baseball bat. Reportedly, the incident began when “the teen” returned home from a gay pride parade. During the assault, his 49-year-old father yelled, cursed, swung a baseball bat, prayed and tried to “cast the demon of homosexuality out of him,” according to the Independent Mail. Maybe there’s something in the air in Anderson. The Independent Mail also reported this week that farm animals have been the targets of drive-by shootings in the area.

Angie Zapata
Angie Zapata, an 18-year-old transgender woman in Greeley, Colorado, was found murdered in her apartment on July 17. She died of wounds to the head and face. Family and friends believe her murder was a hate crime. At her funeral on Wednesday, the officiating minister began the service with one of those awkward, gender-neutralizing statements generally reserved for closeted queers. His uncomfortable approach to Zapata’s funeral service was described in an article by The Greeley Tribune:
Senior pastor Joe Sanchez solemnly stepped up to the front of the congregation, greeted those in attendance, and with a strong and commanding voice, offered his deep condolences. “We are here to celebrate the life of a person, the life of a person cut down in the prime of their life. What can I tell you in this situation, it never feels good to come before a congregation like yourself to express what we feel about a young person that is taken from in the prime of their life.” (Emphasis added.)

Jimmy Lee Dean
Also on July 17, a Texas man was pistol-whipped with a 9mm Glock handgun, kicked and stomped by two attackers who used anti-gay epithets before, during and after the attack. Jimmy Lee Dean, 42, was brutally assaulted in a gay neighborhood where he had lived for 20 years. The Dallas Voice reports that the Dallas Police Department has classified the incident as a hate crime for FBI reporting purposes, adding that it was unclear whether the crime would be prosecuted as such. Dean’s two attackers are so far only charged with aggravated robbery, a first-degree felony. The men admitted to police that they chose Dean’s neighborhood because they thought it would be easier to rob a gay man. Dean survived the attack, which was reported in graphic detail by the Dallas Voice. If you are sensitive to graphic violence, you will want to skip this excerpt from the article:
Dean reportedly suffered a broken jaw and vertebrae, as well as several other facial fractures and severe swelling. Witnesses reported that after the beating, his nose was attached only by a piece of skin. Dean’s injuries were so bad that police were unable to interview or identify him for days after the attack. On Tuesday, July 22, a spokesman for Parkland Memorial Hospital said Dean’s condition had been upgraded to fair, meaning he was no longer in intensive care.

El Paso's GLBTQ Center
Further south in El Paso, Texas, the LGBT community was preparing to celebrate the grand opening of the new GLBTQ Center downtown last week. The opening went on as planned last Thursday, July 17, despite an attack on the director of the center, Charles Sloane, who was kicked and hit in the head as his attackers yelled, “Faggot!” in the lobby of the Center on Monday, July 14. There was a second assault, also in downtown El Paso, that same day.
In the bright summer sunshine of south Florida, several Wilton Manors residents spent last Friday scrubbing anti-gay graffiti off their homes and cars. The Sun-Sentinal reported that the incidents are being tagged a hate crime by police, who apparently used their finely tuned investigative skills to deduce that spray-painting the words “gay” and “fag” on someone’s home is not neighborly.

Father Louis Braxton was beaten trying to stop an attack on a transgender woman.
Alessandra-Michelle Carver, a 21-year-old transgender woman, was brutally attacked and repeatedly beaten in the Astoria section of Queens, New York on Monday, July 7. The attack was reported on July 16 by the Queens Courier newspaper. Also attacked was a priest who tried to help her. Father Louis Braxton runs a shelter for gay and transgender youth called Carmen’s Place. It was on Steinway Street in front of the shelter where the attack on Carver took place.
If all this hate is not enough to make you break out into a sweat, there’s plenty more out there. A Google search for “hate crime” and the words gay, lesbian, transgender or bisexual returned 96,700 results today. It’s really hot out there. And if we can’t stand the heat, perhaps we should get out of the closet and work for understanding, acceptance and equal rights.
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