As "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" to an end, we sent Chris Heath to terview dozens of gay servicemen om the past and prent to fd out what life was really like as Ameri's ary stggled wh s last great inty crisis
Contents:
- PRI SAID GAY COPS AREN’T WELE. THEN CAME THE BACKLASH.
- GAY AND LBIAN COPS: DIVERSY AND EFFECTIVE POLICG
- THE HANDSOME UNRVER P S. IS HE ENTRAPPG GAY MEN OR CLEANG UP A PARK?
- AS A GAY OFFICER I SAW HOW HOMOPHOBIC THE POLICE ARE
- MANY GAY POLICE OFFICERS STILL ENUNTER
- TELL: AN INTIMATE HISTORY OF GAY MEN THE MILARY
PRI SAID GAY COPS AREN’T WELE. THEN CAME THE BACKLASH.
The police once raid gay bars and arrted transgenr people for cross-drsg. Today, misgenrg and harassment are still route. * many gay police officers still encounter *
” On a rooftop at the end of the day, after some drks, he lled home and told his father that he was gay. ” The monstrators left angry but clash between protters and police fillg social media, prsure rose on Herage of Pri to rce police volvement, cludg banng the Gay Officers Actn League, which routely receiv effive cheers durg the Pri march. ” The board did not tell members about the cisn or ask for a the Gay Officers Actn League learned about the g policy, pre-empted Herage of Pri wh s own statement llg the ban “shameful.
“My God, what a bate over this, ” said Andy Humm, a longtime -host of “Gay USA, ” a TV news program. In the past week, he told them, he had received onle msag of hate nsistently om whe gay men, to the extent that his fay feared for his safety.
GAY AND LBIAN COPS: DIVERSY AND EFFECTIVE POLICG
Marc Burke, HOMOSEXUALITY AS DEVIANCE: The Case of the Gay Police Officer, The Brish Journal of Crimology, Vol. 34, No. 2 (Sprg 1994), pp. 192-203 * many gay police officers still encounter *
Fisher, who had lled for the vote of no Downey, print of the gay officers group, said he felt “betrayed” by the ban, pecially bee the officers “put so much of themselv on the choppg block” by workg to change practic and attus wh their partments. Reports n be found across the Uned Stat of police allegedly g excsive force agast lbian, gay, bisexual, transgenr and queer people. The multiday prott — wily nsired a pivotal turng pot the morn gay rights movement — was triggered by a police raid on the popular Stonewall Inn gay bar.
History, police officers were bound to enforce explicly anti-gay laws — om lol measur outlawg men om “impersonatg a female” to the wispread crimalizatn of same-sex sexual activy. She poted to a study published by the Williams Instute May that found lbian, gay, bisexual and queer people are six tim more likely than the general public to be stopped by police (data about transgenr dividuals were not available the datasets analyzed). The bans have been divisive, even wh the LGBTQ muny — and particularly among openly gay police officers.
Prr to the start of this trag, negative attus about the LGBTQ muny were reportedly pervasive wh the partment: In 1996, durg a retrag of veteran officers, a word associatn exercise asked for rpons to the word “gays. Gtavo Alvarez, a gay rint of Palo Alto, California, settled his lawsu agast s police partment after accg of vlatg his civil rights, rultg a settlement that clud a $572, 500 payout and a one-off two hours of mandatory LGBTQ-awarens trag for all police officers the partment.
THE HANDSOME UNRVER P S. IS HE ENTRAPPG GAY MEN OR CLEANG UP A PARK?
“There was no secret that he was gay, and the officers fely ed that as a way to mean him their prr ntacts wh him and also durg this ntact.
In New York Cy — where LGBTQ trag is provid by the Gay Officers Actn League (GOAL) for both new recs and veteran officers — Cummgs wants the police missner to be a civilian and lgs om the Civilian Complat Review Board, the NYPD’s oversight agency, be bdg.
AS A GAY OFFICER I SAW HOW HOMOPHOBIC THE POLICE ARE
“Across the board systemic racism and homophobia is play wh policg, so go beyond trag and budget. An troductory chapter clus a se study of how two lbian police officers assisted the vtigatn of the murr of a gay, hearg-impaired llege stunt.
Chapter 2 provis an overview of the relevant lerature, cludg background rmatn on discrimatn agast gay and lbian dividuals public employment, the ways which sexual mori manage disclosure the workplace, the recent history of lbian and gay people policg, and the velopment of shared perceptns by gay and lbian officers about their work environment. This chapter also discs how anizatnal effectivens n be promised when police agenci rist diversifitn that clus the hirg of gay and lbian officers.
This policg philosophy has led law enforcement agenci to face diversy the muni they serve, which has led to regnn of the importance of recg gay and lbian people to police service.
MANY GAY POLICE OFFICERS STILL ENUNTER
Chapter 4 nsirs the experienc and shared perceptns of lbian and gay officers the Uned Stat and the Uned Kgdom, followed by a chapter that discs the ways which lbian and gay officers have brought a unique dimensn to law enforcement. Chapter 6 highlights two se studi - one the Uned Stat and one the Uned Kgdom - which show the distctive and specialized ntributns of gay and lbian officers to policg. The two remag chapters foc on improvements recg and retag lbian and gay officers; and bt practic are remend based on rearch nducted for this book.
Bars and rtrants were often raid and shut down for servg gay patrons, and transgenr people were hled for "masqueradg" as another genr. An uprisg led by transgenr and genr-nonnformg people had igned a gay-rights movement the Uned Stat — a movement that would forever be lked wh police muny eventually received an apology for the New York Cy Police Department's actns, but took a half a century. 'They hated me'In 1962, an officer named Elltt Blackstone was assigned to mediate relatns between the San Francis Police Department and the "homophile" muny, as was then known.
TELL: AN INTIMATE HISTORY OF GAY MEN THE MILARY
A straight cis man, he soon emerged as an ally of LGBTQ muni, workg to change the partment's policy regardg bar raids and entrapment of gay men public rtrooms. "Like most people growg up the '50s, '60s, '70s, I had my own bias about gay people that I had to al wh, " he said. But the unrver operatn, which was sharply cricized recently by a judge, also exemplifi a ntroversial, age-old police tactic that many of California’s largt law enforcement agenci have quietly abandoned recent years amid mountg cricism and changg sexual the most-read stori this hour >>In Los Angel, Long Beach and other areas where unrver lewd nduct stgs endure, police fend them as an important tool for tchg people who are vlatg the law and for terrg others om tryg to have sex parks and other public areas ed by fai and activists do not ndone public sex but have long nmned the bts as a form of entrapment, sayg they unfairly sgle out gay men, wh sometim vastatg nsequenc.
But recent years, crics of the stgs have gaed tractn as public attus about homosexualy and gay rights have shifted.
“Nobody is gog to fend lewd nduct, but there is a qualative difference between sexual predators and people who engage boorish behavr, ” said Los Angel County Asssor Jefey Prang, who is gay and a former special assistant the Sheriff’s Department who worked wh s LGBT advisory uncil. Last month, a Los Angel County judge threw out the charg one se stemmg om Long Beach’s 2014 operatn, sayg police were discrimatg agast gay law enforcement agenci have stopped rponse to lawsus or after polil backlash.