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Tag: Salt Lake City

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7 People Charged In Beating Of Gay Man Acquitted Of Kidnapping

Seven family members in Salt Lake City, Utah who prosecutors say beat up a homosexual man acquitted of kidnapping two children have been charged in connection with a brutal assault. Salt Lake City District Attorney Lohra Miller released charging documents on Tuesday that outline the events of July 4, 2008. David James Bell (photo left) was arrested after family members alleged that he had kidnapped two children from a neighborhood party. He was acquitted by a jury of kidnapping charges last summer. Bell says he was attacked after two children came to his house and asked for something to drink. Bell says that's when the mother came over and started hitting him. He says other family members showed up a few minutes later and continued to beat him and his partner Dan Fair
Bell announced in October 2009 that he planned to sue members of the family and perhaps the South Salt Lake Police Department over the arrest. Bell indicated he's upset with the way the South Salt Lake Police Department handled the case. His attorney’s say they didn’t collect evidence or even go into Bell’s house where the beatings happened. Bell says he was beaten because he was gay. Tuesday's criminal filing did not specify any hate crimes, but were related to felony assault and riot charges. Ieti David Mageo (A.K.A. "Punisher") was charged with aggravated burglary, aggravated assault and rioting, all felonies. Ricky Ian Peace was charged with aggravated burglary, assault and rioting, all felonies. Ietitaia Tevita Nuusila was charged with aggravated burglary and assault along with rioting, all felonies. She was also charged with misdemeanor assault and giving false information to a police officer. Angelina Janae Dibella, Marsha Rae Finau and Lisa Rita Aiono were all charged with felony rioting. Dibella also faces a misdemeanor assault charge. Charging documents say Bell was beaten and intentionally cut with broken glass during the alleged assault. David Bell and his partner were beaten nearly to death in their South Salt Lake home.  The attack came after allegations that Bell had kidnapped his next door neighbor's children.  This is what one of the neighbors accused in Bell's beating told ABC 4 back in July of 2008, "All I could think about was the safety of my nephew, the safety of my daughter." But Bell has been cleared of any wrong doing and now it's those neighbors who are facing criminal charges.  Bell's attorney Susanne Gustin says, "These are very serious charges against them... David feels that justice is now being served and they've waited a long time for this day." The seven accused face a total of sixteen charges, the most serious is 1st degree felony aggravated burglary.  It's taken this long for those charges to come down because of the child kidnapping case against Bell.  Alicia Cook with the District Attorney's office says that essentially stalled the assault case also involving Bell.  Cook says, "We had individuals who were both defendants and witnesses on both sides of the equation and that just raises a lot of legal complications." Bell's attorneys feel the charges are fair and accurate and believe the truth of what happened on that Independence Day in 2008 will finally be revealed, "Clearly a crime was committed that day. we've always believed it wasn't committed by DJ Bell, but by the people next door to him." Story From ABC News
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Oldest Gay Bar in the Western United States Torn Down (video)

RCLoungeSalt Lake City was the home to the oldest gay bar in the Western U.S. Radio City, also known as the RC Lounge, opened in 1948. Rose Carrier was a bartender at the RC Lounge and remembered the place was always packed and the customers were classy. "Being gay, they didn't want to be seen going through the front door, so they would come through the back door and leave through the back door," Carrier said.

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Mormon Church's First-Ever Support of Gay Rights Bill in Utah

gay-mormons_kissingThe Mormon church for the first time has announced its support of gay rights legislation, an endorsement that helped gain unanimous approval for Salt Lake city laws banning discrimination against gays in housing and employment. The Utah-based church's support ahead of Tuesday night's vote came despite its steadfast opposition to gay marriage, reflected in the high-profile role it played last year in California's Proposition 8 ballot measure that barred such unions. "The church supports these ordinances because they are fair and reasonable and do not do violence to the institution of marriage," Michael Otterson, the director of public affairs for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said. Passage made Salt Lake City the first Utah community to prohibit bias based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Under the two new ordinances, it is illegal to fire someone from their job or evict someone from their residence because they are lesbian, bisexual, gay or transgender. Utah lawmakers tend to quickly fall in line when the influential church makes a rare foray into legislative politics. So Tuesday's action could have broad effects in this highly conservative state where more than 80 percent of lawmakers and the governor are church members. "What happened here tonight I do believe is a historic event," said Brandie Balken, director of the gay rights advocacy group Equality Utah. "I think it establishes that we can stand together on common ground that we don't have to agree on everything, but there are lot of things that we can work on and be allies." But the church has pointed out an inherent dispute it has with gay relationships. Mormonism considers traditional marriages central to God's plan. Gays are welcome in church, but must remain celibate to retain church callings and full membership. Its strong support for Proposition 8 in California last year drew a sharp reaction from gay rights supporters nationwide, with many protesting outside temples that singled out Mormons as the key culprits in restricting the rights of gay couples. Since then, however, Utah's gay community has sought to engage church leaders in quiet conversations to help foster better understanding, said Valerie Larabee, executive director of the Utah Pride Center. "I thought this conversation would never come to be while I was here in Salt Lake City," said Larabee, adding that the discussions have "shifted her perspective of what's possible" and could foreshadow a different relationship between the two sides. But addressing the council on Tuesday, Otterson said the endorsement is not a shift in the church's position on gay rights and stressed it "remains unequivocally committed to defending the bedrock foundation of marriage between a man and a woman." Church support for the ordinances is due in part to the way the legislation was drafted to protect those rights. Exceptions in the legislation allow churches to maintain, without penalty, religious principles and religion-based codes of conduct or rules. "In drafting these ordinances, the city has granted commonsense rights that should be available to everyone, while safeguarding the crucial rights of religious organizations," Otterson said Tuesday. Previous Utah legislation that sought statewide protections for the gay community did not contain those exceptions. And although this was the church's first public endorsement of specific legislation, it is not the first time the church has voiced support for some gay rights. In August 2008 the church issued a statement saying it supports gay rights related to hospitalization, medical care, employment, housing or probate as long as they "do not infringe on the integrity of the traditional family or the constitutional rights of churches." Last year, church leaders were silent on a package of gay rights bills known as the Common Ground Initiative, dooming them from the start, despite the bill having the support of the most popular governor in state history, Jon Huntsman. Huntsman resigned this summer to become U.S. ambassador to China. His successor, Gov. Gary Herbert, has repeatedly said it shouldn't be illegal to discriminate against someone for being gay. Story Associated Press
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Homosexuality 'not in your DNA,' So Says Mormons

gay_dnaPeople who are attracted to members of their own sex can change, an LDS general authority said Saturday, so they shouldn't let Satan persuade them they can't. Elder Bruce C. Hafen, a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy, spoke at the 19th annual conference of Evergreen International, a nonprofit group that helps Mormons "overcome homosexual behavior" and "diminish same-sex attraction." The event was held at the LDS Church's Joseph Smith Memorial Building in Salt Lake City. Hafen promised attendees, "If you are faithful, on resurrection morning -- and maybe even before then -- you will rise with normal attractions for the opposite sex." Whenever the devil -- whom Hafen referred to as "the adversary" -- tries to "convince you that you are hopelessly 'that way,' so that acting out your feelings is inevitable, he is lying," Hafen said. "He is the father of lies." Last month, the American Psychological Association passed a resolution advising mental health professionals against telling their clients they can change their sexual orientation through therapy or other treatments. No solid evidence exists that such efforts work, the APA concluded, and some studies suggest the potential for harm, including depression and suicidal tendencies. A task force reviewed 83 studies on sexual-orientation change conducted since 1960. The "long-standing consensus" of the behavioral and social sciences, the APA noted, is that homosexuality is a "normal and positive variation of human sexual orientation." Will Carlson of Equality Utah, which advocates on behalf of gay and transgender Utahns, when contacted by The Tribune, said, "These young men and women at Evergreen are experiencing normal attractions right now ... It's irresponsible for [Hafen] to suggest that if someone just wants to bad enough, they can be straight." Hafen spent a large portion of his talk, held during a Sunday-like service, criticizing the gay-rights movement and denying a biological link to sexual orientation. Same-sex attraction is "not in your DNA," he said. He attacked the APA's decision to remove homosexuality from its list of mental disorders, deeming it politically motivated. "In the early 1970s, the public and most lawyers, doctors and therapists saw homosexuality not as normal adult behavior but as a psychological disorder," he said. "We have witnessed primarily an aggressive political movement more than we've witnessed substantive change in the medical or legal evidence." Lisa Diamond, a psychology professor and researcher at the University of Utah, in an interview with The Tribune , called Hafen's assertion "hilarious" and "absolutely untrue." Homosexuality had been listed as a disorder, Diamond said, without any real scientific data. The APA reversed course after a pioneering psychologist, Evelyn Hooker, produced research to show there was no difference between the mental health of straight and gay individuals, she said. "That moment really did represent, in fact, the triumph of science over prejudice," Diamond said. There is "strong evidence" that there are "biological contributions" to sexual orientation, Diamond noted, but it's a complex process. She called arguments about the lack of a so-called "gay gene," a "smoke screen" for those who promote sexual-orientation change. Reprinted From Salt Lake Tribune
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Gay Pride in Southern Utah

Salt Lake City's gay-pride festival draws tens of thousands of people. Major sponsors such as Wells Fargo, Hilton and Bud Light line up to splash their logos at the event. And politicians, Democrats and Republicans alike, march in the parade - second only in size to Utah's Days of '47 procession. Not so at southwestern Utah's only pride festival. St. George-based Southern Utah Pride Association (SUPA), which serves the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) communities, struggles to secure sponsors, attract politicians and boost attendance in one of the nation's most conservative regions - home to cities that spawned an official "U.N.-free zone," a short-lived ordinance requiring a gun in every home and a resolution embracing "natural" families. Still, SUPA President Chris McArdle hopes the event comes into its own this year - the festival's sixth - by luring 5,000 people to Springdale on Sept. 26 and 27. "Last year, we had 1,013 - and we thought that was impossible," he says, noting previous years had only a few hundred attendees. "We're at that transitional period. Everyone who's afraid to support us needs to realize that there's a lot of people who do. The fear is they're going to stick out."

Best Ever Parade Float Flying Saucer - The saucer swung over the crowd as the fat lady sang disco diva hits. The boys in the silver lame underwear danced. And then the saucer blasted of jet of white smoke ... and disappeared in the streets of Salt Lake City.

Most of this year's sponsors are other GLBT groups or businesses, including Q Salt Lake magazine, Equality Utah and The Advocate. Securing venues in St. George for fundraisers or even store windows to place fliers has proved difficult, McArdle notes. And The Spectrum asked to have its logo removed from SUPA's Web site and brochures, McArdle says, after the St. George newspaper deemed an earlier promise of $1,000 in free ads made by a former marketing director as unauthorized. The paper agreed to run the ads. But Publisher Donnie Welch says the logo was pulled because SUPA wanted more free advertising in return for keeping up the logo. "We do not agree that [SUPA's] Web site is worth what we were going to give them in print," Welch says. "We would make the exact same decision on any other business, organization or project in the community."  McArdle says he never asked for additional ads to continue displaying the paper's logo, which he would have preferred to keep on the Web site because he was "proud" to have The Spectrum as a sponsor. Politicians attending the festival are limited to Utah's three, openly gay legislators - Sen. Scott McCoy, Rep. Jackie Biskupski and Rep. Christine Johnson, all from Salt Lake City - and a handful of Democrats vying for state office, including gubernatorial long shot Bob Springmeyer. "It would be a big political liability" for southern Utah politicians to attend, says Washington County Commissioner Alan Gardner, who is up for re-election this year. "I wouldn't have any interest in supporting that movement." His Democratic challenger, Lin Alder, won't be going, either. Alder cites a scheduling conflict, but acknowledges that "the politics of Washington County makes it difficult for a moderate candidate to openly support" the GLBT group. "I can understand the challenges that they're facing," he adds. SUPA relies on the festival's attractive location - red-rock-ringed Springdale, the gateway to Zion National Park - to draw visitors from other more liberal locales. Most attendees do not hail from Washington County, McArdle concedes. "The biggest challenge [here] is the inability to be gay and lesbian people without fear of backlash," he says, noting many choose to remain in the closet. "They're afraid to show up at our events because they're afraid they'll be outed." Claudia Bradshaw, founder of the St. George chapter of PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) hopes the visibility of GLBT people at the pride festival helps more gay men and women feel comfortable being out in Washington County. She has trouble getting parents to openly acknowledge their gay children and march with her in SUPA's parade.  She hopes the event will help prevent suicides among GLBT youths. Her 36-year-old son, Braden, believed as a teen that he was the only gay person in Washington County and the only gay Mormon on the planet. He thought about suicide and kept his sexuality secret, she says, but later came out to his family at age 26. "There are all kinds of stories, but it's all the silence that is just killing people," Claudia Bradshaw says. "If everyone came out and told the truth about who they are, and if parents spoke up for their children, it would be the end of discrimination."

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