Category: Michigan
Police suspect ‘hate crime’ in stabbing attack after anti-gay rant on ‘Craigslist’
A recent assault and carjacking in Battle Creek, Michigan, has now led to a possible hate crimes investigation after police discovered two anti-gay rants that appeared online in Craigslist postings.
On July 25th, police say a 45-year-old man was brutally stabbed multiple times in the head and neck after another man forced him at knife point to drive from a gas station to wooded area of the Leila Arboretum. The suspect fled, taking the victim’s car after a witness heard screaming and interrupted the attack.
Now Battle Creek police say the attack was likely a hate crime, reports the Battle Creek Enquirer:
Detective Sgt. Austin Simons, supervisor of the detective bureau, said Thursday that police are investigating an online posting which appeared the day after the attack on Craigslist, a classified advertisement website.
In the anonymous message, which has since been removed, the writer, using derogatory references to gays, alluded to the attack under the headline “I warned you, you dumb queer.” The message continued about the meeting at the park and “I e-mailed and said I have something … but you did not think it was a knife did you. Now you are in the hospital and your car is in the river. I warned you.”
According to the Michigan Messenger, a second anonymous post appeared on Craigslist, this time the poster denied responsibility in the assault.
The post was filled with anti-gay slurs and references to AIDS. The writer claims that the previous post was “to keep the fags out of the parks, and I am the one that did it. It is not safe to take children to parks or for a walk in the woods without running into a dick sucking party.”
Police said the first Craigslist posting included a photograph, which does seem to match the description of the attacker the victim gave police, of a stocky white man with a bald, shaved head.
Both posts have since been removed from the website.
Simons said police still are looking for the victim’s car, a copper-colored Toyota Matrix and the suspect, described as a stocky white man with bald or shaved head and wearing a black shirt the day of the attack.
The victim, whose name has not been released, was hospitalized for ten days.
With the suspicion that the stabbing may be a hate crime, Battle Creek Police have contacted the FBI to assist in the investigation.
Previously from LGBTQ Nation:

Popular gay campground targeted with anti-gay graffiti
Michigan lawmaker targets transgender's drivers licenses as campaign platform
Michigan legislator introduces gay marriage amendment
Election night brings victory and defeat for gay candidates, issues across the nation
Family calls attack on Michigan gay teen a 'hate crime'
Popular gay campground targeted with anti-gay graffiti
A popular gay campground in Saugatuck, MI was vandalized with anti-gay graffiti this past weekend.
A worker who lives across the street from the Campit Outdoor Resort discovered the graffiti on Saturday morning, waking up to find a swastika and some anti-gay remarks had been painted on the fence.
The Allegan County Sheriff’s Department says it’s taking the act of vandalism seriously, but it’s not being considered a hate crime.
Saugatuck is a short drive from Chicago and very popular with the LGBTQ community. The site has been a camp for 50 years and a known gay and lesbian resort for 40 years. It has 165 sites for campers, RVs and tents, two one-bedroom cabins, 16 one-room sleeper log cabins and a five-bedroom bed and breakfast and vintage travel trailer rentals.
Previously from LGBTQ Nation:

Police suspect 'hate crime' in stabbing attack after anti-gay rant on 'Craigslist'
Michigan lawmaker targets transgender's drivers licenses as campaign platform
Michigan legislator introduces gay marriage amendment
Election night brings victory and defeat for gay candidates, issues across the nation
Family calls attack on Michigan gay teen a 'hate crime'
Michigan lawmaker targets transgender’s drivers licenses as campaign platform
A state lawmaker, running for the GOP nomination to be the next Secretary of State in Michigan, is wasting no time addressing the real issues facing Michigan — stopping transgender people from changing their sex on their drivers license.
Paul Scott, who just completed the first year of his first two-year term in the Michigan state House, is rankling feathers with a promise he made in his Jan. 15 announcement letter, which listed four top policy priorities, including:
“I will make it a priority to ensure transgender individuals will not be allowed to change the sex on their driver’s license in any circumstance.”
In an interview with Michigan Messenger, Scott, 27, said the issue was about “values.”
“It’s a social values issue. If you are born a male, you should be known as a male. Same as with a female, she should be known as a female,” he said.
When asked to explain how such a mandate from the Secretary of State would benefit Michigan, he said it was about “preventing people who are males genetically from dressing as a woman and going into female bathrooms.”
While Scott is aware that federal courts have ruled that gender dysphoria, the medical diagnosis for transgender persons, was a disability, he said he did not think he would run afoul of discrimination laws.
He said his mandate would be in place even for those who had completely undergone sex reassignment surgeries.
“Representative Scott’s remarks indicate that he is not fit to serve the people of Michigan in this position,” said Julie Nemecek, a transgender activist from the Jackson area.
More from the Michigan Messenger.
Previously from LGBTQ Nation:

Police suspect 'hate crime' in stabbing attack after anti-gay rant on 'Craigslist'
Popular gay campground targeted with anti-gay graffiti
Michigan legislator introduces gay marriage amendment
Election night brings victory and defeat for gay candidates, issues across the nation
Family calls attack on Michigan gay teen a 'hate crime'
Michigan legislator introduces gay marriage amendment
A gay marriage amendment could soon be up for vote in Michigan.
Just one day following the repeal of the gay marriage law in Maine, House Speaker Pro Tem Pam Byrnes introduced a resolution that would reverse Michigan’s ban on same-sex unions.
Right now Michigan’s constitution recognizes marriage as being between one man and one woman.
Byrnes says it’s time for a change. She would need super-majority votes in both the House and Senate to to place the amendment on the ballot for the 2010 general election.
If the bill doesn’t pass, proponents would have to collect more than 380,000 signatures to get the proposal on the ballot.
Previously from LGBTQ Nation:

Police suspect 'hate crime' in stabbing attack after anti-gay rant on 'Craigslist'
Gay marriage irony: 13 states still have no laws against bestiality
Popular gay campground targeted with anti-gay graffiti
Prop 8 opponents must release campaign materials, judge rules
Lambda Legal, NJ gay couples back in court over right to marry
NJ gay marriage advocates taking their case back to state supreme court
Election night brings victory and defeat for gay candidates, issues across the nation
It was to be a night of hope and promise for the LGBT community, but instead the crushing defeat of Maine’s gay marriage law delivered another setback for gay rights advocates and overshadowed many other victories at the ballot box Tuesday.
In Maine, voters on Tuesday rejected a law allowing gay marriage, a closely fought referendum on the one year anniversary of a similar outcome in California.
In repealing the law passed by the legislature last May, Maine becomes the third state in which voters reversed government rulings to permit gay marriages, after California and Hawaii.
Full story on Maine’s gay marriage vote, here.
But in an apparent victory for gay rights supporters, Washington voters seemed to be approving Referendum 71, which expands the state’s domestic partnership law.
The so called “everything but marriage” law will grant gay couples more than 200 additional rights currently reserved for married spouses, including ensuring extended work leave for people with critically ill partners and preserving pension benefits for the surviving partner in the event of the other’s death.
Full story on Referendum 71, here.
In other races across the nation:
Out lesbian Annise Parker in run-off for Houston mayor
From the Houston Chronicle:
The race for Houston mayor narrowed Tuesday to a choice between a veteran City Hall insider hoping to become Houston’s first openly gay leader and a former civil rights activist hoping to become only the second African-American to run the nation’s fourth-largest city.
City Controller Annise Parker and former City Attorney Gene Locke, the two candidates originally predicted by many to prevail at the race’s outset, will face each other in a Dec. 12 runoff election.
Addressing a jubilant crowd, Parker looked ahead to the runoff election. “This race is not over,” she said. “In five weeks, we’ll claim victory.”
Kalamazoo voters approve anti-discrimination law
From the Kalamazoo Gazette:
In Kalamazoo, Michigan, voters decisively adopted a city ordinance Tuesday that extends anti-discrimination protections to gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender individuals.
The ordinance passed 7,671 to 4,731, making Kalamazoo the 16th city in Michigan to adopt such a gay-rights ordinance that grants the protections in the areas of employment, housing and public accommodations.
The ordinance was approved in all but three of the city’s voting places. It also passed among heavy absentee ballot voting.
Chapel Hill elects first openly gay mayor
From the Chapel Hill News:
In Chapel Hill, N.C., two-term councilman Mark Kleinschmidt, a death-penalty defense lawyer and gay rights advocate, narrowly defeated colleague Matt Czajkowski to take the reins as mayor.
Kleinschmidt received 48.6 percent of the vote in the four-person mayoral race.
“We have a divided community right now, and that’s got to be job No. 1 to address that,” Kleinschmidt said. “The first thing is to talk to Matt.”
Kleinschmidt’s victory marks the first time an openly gay candidate has won Chapel Hill’s mayoral office, and only the third time an openly gay man has been elected mayor of a town in North Carolina.
St. Petersburg elects first openly gay official
From the St. Petersburg Times:
In St. Petersburg, Florida, The City Council will welcome one fresh face: Steve Kornell.
When he takes office Jan. 2, Kornell will become the first openly gay person elected to office in St. Petersburg. It’s a significant milestone in a city with a large gay community that has faced opposition to pride displays under conservative leadership.
Kornell has an extensive background working with city recreation centers, running both Childs Park and Shore Acres. He wrote a grant that still brings in millions for teen programs in the area.
Detroit elects openly gay city council president
From the Detroit Free Press:
Detroit elected openly gay former Fox News reporter Charles Pugh to the city council Tuesday.
By capturing the most votes, Pugh, who survived negative publicity due to his foreclosure woes, will be council president.
“This is unbelievable,” Pugh told the Free Press before a victory speech.
“It means Detroit has really wanted change for a very long time.”
Previously from LGBTQ Nation:

Appeals court reverses Texas same-sex divorce case
Florida GOP candidate trifecta: no gay marriage, adoption, or foster parenting
Police suspect 'hate crime' in stabbing attack after anti-gay rant on 'Craigslist'
Gay marriage irony: 13 states still have no laws against bestiality
Supreme Court rejects petition secrecy of anti-gay ballot initiative
Popular gay campground targeted with anti-gay graffiti
Family calls attack on Michigan gay teen a ‘hate crime’
A 15-year-old Michigan boy says two other teenagers beat him because he is gay, and two advocacy groups spoke out this week against the beating.
The attack on Steven Harmon on August 13 is being called a hate crime by his family. Investigators say Steven was punched repeatedly by two teenagers in a parking lot of a Portage, MI apartment complex.
Recounting the incident Wednesday, Steven said he was called “faggot,” “queer” and other derogatory terms as the two boys struck him in the head and face about 20 times.
Officials from the Kalamazoo Alliance for Equality said they were “shocked and deeply saddened” by the attack. The Kalamazoo Gay Lesbian Resource Center also spoke out against the attack.
Two boys, ages 15 and 16, have been charged as juveniles with aggravated assault in connection with the incident, Kalamazoo County Prosecutor Jeff Fink said. The older of the two pleaded guilty to the charge Tuesday in Kalamazoo County Circuit Court Family Division and is being held in the county juvenile home until a September 14 dispositional hearing.
Police say the suspects may have targeted the boy for his sexual orientation, but the suspects aren’t charged with a hate crime because the state’s ethnic-intimidation law doesn’t specifically address sexual orientation.
More on the story here from WMMT-TV.
Previously from LGBTQ Nation:

Police suspect 'hate crime' in stabbing attack after anti-gay rant on 'Craigslist'
Gay marriage irony: 13 states still have no laws against bestiality
Popular gay campground targeted with anti-gay graffiti
Marc Delphine: Oregon's first openly gay candidate to seek federal office
Virginia governor strips 'sexual orientation' from state's non-discrimination policy
Michigan lawmaker targets transgender's drivers licenses as campaign platform









