Harlem Trans Dad Sues NYPD for Transphobic Mistreatment

Harlem Trans Dad Sues NYPD for Transphobic Mistreatment

It has been almost three years since The Advocate asked if the New York City Police Department has an endemic problem with transgender people. Now, in the case of at least one trans man from Harlem, that problem has not been fixed.

Marlow White, a 51 year old African American transgender father of four daughters filed a $2 million federal lawsuit on August 25 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. White claims the NYPD discriminated against him based on his gender identity, after he sought help following threatening alleged attacks by his neighbor, Napoleon Monroe, according to a September 4 Huffington Post report.

Reached by phone on September 9 in a joint interview with his attorney, White told the reporter that the trouble began on March 20. He claimed Monroe, the boyfriend of his neighbor, Ana Amezquita, threatened him and his family in their Harlem co-op apartment after discovering that he is, as White said, “a black man of trans experience.” White noted in the phone interview that Monroe neither lives nor leases a unit within his building, and is only a frequent visitor of Amezquita. Attempts by The Advocate to reach Monroe were unsuccessful at press time. In its report, the Huffington Post notes that Monroe denied White’s version of the events. 

After approximately a month and a half of tense encounters within White’s building, in which White claimed to have ignored Monroe’s attempts to talk to him in the hallway,  White received a series of hostile text messages on May 3, allegedly from Monroe, sent from Amezquita’s phone. Screenshots of the text messages from the Huffington Post report reveal the texts to be hostile, including direct threats against White and boasts of domestic violence: “I’m going to speak with your wife and see if she needs my company when you and her go threw [sic] things. Ill talk to her and treat her way better than Ana. You wanna play dumb, let’s play motherfucker! I just slapped Ana. Come protect her! I’ll cut your fucking head off lil man.”

Three days after receiving the text messages, White alleged that Monroe threatened his partner, Natalie Lewis, in person and a verbal dispute unfolded on the street in front of their building. White explained over the phone that when police arrived they refused to file a report about the harassment against White and the officers ignored Monroe while he made transphobic comments on the street in plain view and earshot of the officers and witnesses. Even though White visited the 28th Precinct stationhouse later that day and showed them the threatening text messages, the NYPD refused to file a report about the threats against White. Without a police report, White could not request an order of protection legally mandating Monroe to stay away from White and his family.

“It took two weeks, repeated requests, and the threat of contempt of a state-court order before the NYPD reluctantly accepted and filed a criminal complaint from Plaintiff,” White’s attorney, Donald Dunn, noted in the text of the lawsuit, a copy of which he provided to The Advocate. In the September 9 phone interview, Dunn also explained that when he accompanied White to the 28th Precinct to serve notice of the lawsuit, attending police continued their disrespect of White. “It was as if [White] had to be physically harmed or even killed to receive action from the police,” Dunn said, “and even then the disrespect of people of trans experience continues.” 
 
In a September 14 email, Sgt. Michelle Martindale of the NYPD’s LGBT Liaison Unit told The Advocate, “We are not allowed to discuss the case that [White] has brought against the City of New York. You can email Deputy Commissioner Public Information for a possible response.” Calls to the DCPI were not returned by press time.

White’s case exemplifies a pattern of ongoing violence against trans people in NYC and problematic police responses. The Advocate reported that in 2014, Kimy Hartman suffered brain damage from a transphobic beating. In 2012, The Advocate announced that the NYPD had changed its policies after Temmie Breslauer sued the NYPD for chaining her to a wall for 28 hours upon her arrest for using her father’s discount subway fare care. Now trans people in custody are supposed to be kept in facilities that comport with their gender identity, not assignments at birth and the practice of “chaining” has been curtailed in the revised guidelines. Chaining is a form of police harassment whereby arrested trans individuals are chained to walls, bars, or chairs at holding facilities with arms upraised or in other vulnerable positions whereby other inmates may abuse them.

In the phone interview, Dunn deplored the ongoing dehumanization faced by trans New Yorkers, emphasizing that hate crimes and police mistreatment ignore trans people’s significant contributions to their community: “White was one of the principal people that got the building designated as an affordable housing co-opt by the city. He helped renovate it and make it livable for many people. White is a father–he’s an activist in his community.” Indeed, White worked as the Harlem Resident Representative for the Harlem-Bronx LGBT Task Force. 

Dunn described himself as “a married white heterosexual man with adopted daughters of color” who lives in the Bronx and who bonded with White over play dates with their children long before Dunn ever knew that White was, in fact, a trans man. “I grew to respect [White] as a father and a man long before I became his attorney.” 

“This lawsuit speaks to the intersectionality of cisgender folks and people of trans experience,” said White over the phone. White suggested that the respectful way that Dunn and White interact as fathers in their communities is the model for how all people should treat one another, including the NYPD. “I want everyone to know that this lawsuit is a fight for respect across all our differences in this city,” White said, “I fear for my children. I want the words ‘protect and serve’ to mean something.”   

Cleis Abeni

www.advocate.com/transgender/2015/9/21/harlem-trans-dad-sues-nypd-transphobic-mistreatment

Here's What It's Like To Be Somebody Who Hates Everyone And Everything

Here's What It's Like To Be Somebody Who Hates Everyone And Everything

Life can be hard where you hate everyone and everything.

 

In this hilarious episode of “The Disgustings,” our familiar protagonists(?) take it upon themselves to ambush people on their first dates and tell people how insufferably they are acting.

 

“The Disgustings” stars well-known comedian Drew Droege and is written, directed and co-stars Jordan Firstman. The different installments follow two jaded gay men dealing with their day to day lives and the struggle of living in Los Angeles.  

 

“In the two years since we have seen these characters, it may look like nothing has changed,” Firstman told The Huffington Post. “But a lot has changed, and now they are even more confident about their identity that they are seeking out prey for their own enjoyment instead of just enjoying ripping apart what is in front of them. Its a little existential, huh? They used to just live to destroy the moment, and now they are seeking out moments to destroy. I think a lot of people will watch and agree that these dates are annoying, talking about schools, workout dates, selfies on a first date. And they are. But when I see dates happening, they are never sitting there talking shit on other dates. The only people talking talking shit are the people who aren’t dating at all. So the point is this: get out there and be the date that everyone makes fun of!”

 

This episode of “The Disgustings” was a collaboration between Gawker and Hulu’s original series “Difficult People.”

 

Missed “The Disgustings” in the past? Head here.

 

Also on HuffPost:

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REVIEW: Les Deux Chevres – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy

REVIEW: Les Deux Chevres – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy

At some stage or other we’ve all toyed with the expat dream of moving to France, renovating some run-down buildings, and opening a small hotel. When you stay at Les Deaux Chevres in the small village of Gevrey-Chambertin then you are seeing that expat dream brought to life by owners Paul and Jolanta.

This dynamic couple (she is Polish, he is English) have taken two dilapidated old buildings and sensitively transformed them into a boutique hotel that provides the perfect base from which to explore the wine region of Burgundy.

With simple but stylish decor, the history of the buildings and region is comfortably blended with all the modern necessities of luxury accommodation.

Breakfast was particularly good – eggs and a sumptuous buffet of all sorts of food.

One of the features of the hotel is that it has a detached house that can be hired out for parties. For a big birthday or celebration I would love to hire this place for enormous dinner parties for family and friends.

Highly recommended.

Gay Star News reviews Les Deux Chevres – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy
Gay Star News reviews Les Deux Chevres – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy
Gay Star News reviews Les Deux Chevres – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy

Read more from Gareth Johnson

Read more hotel reviews

The post REVIEW: Les Deux Chevres – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy appeared first on Gay Star News.

Gareth Johnson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/review-les-deux-chevres-gevrey-chambertin-burgundy/

Homophobic Bar Owner Goes Off On Gay Couple, Internet Goes Off On Homophobic Bar Owner

Homophobic Bar Owner Goes Off On Gay Couple, Internet Goes Off On Homophobic Bar Owner

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.34.31 AMA Fayetteville, North Carolina bar owner who kicked a gay couple out because of public displays of affection says she is getting threats from “coast to coast” via social media because of her actions.

Or at least that’s how the local media is covering the story.

Long-time Fayetteville resident Dustin Baker and his visiting boyfriend Andrew Deras decided to hit up Louie’s Sports Pub for a few drinks and to catch the live band.

Related: Gay Couple Kicked Out Of Public Pool For Kissing And It’s All Caught On Video

What Deras describes as a “minor peck” from Baker prompted bar owner Pam Griffin to approach the couple and ask them to “move apart.”

“You don’t need to be doing that,” she told them, adding “you’re making people uncomfortable.”

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.34.02 AMSo Deras planted a big kiss on Baker in front of Griffin, and that’s when she flipped her lid and made it clear they were no longer welcome.

Local affiliate WRAL interviewed attorney Michael Boose about the incident, who maintained that Griffin had every right to kick the couple out, not because they’re gay, but because they were causing a “disturbance.”

Related: Teens Kicked Out Of McDonald’s For Classin’ Up The Joint With A Gay Date

The story ends with this red flag of a double standard: “Two weeks ago they had a heterosexual couple doing the same thing and [Griffin] asked them to calm down. They did, and they were allowed to stay.”

Somehow we doubt the straight threshold for making Griffin and her regulars uncomfortable is equal to the gay one.

Speaking with the Fayetteville Observer, Griffin said:  “I tried to be as nice as I could. This is a straight bar. I don’t mind who comes in — white, black, mixed, Chinese. Everybody’s welcome. But you have to respect the kind of place you’re in.”

But let’s get back to these “threats” Griffin is supposedly receiving on social media.

Here’s a sampling of some of our favorites from Louie’s Yelp page. Nothing we found comes close to constituting a threat:

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.26.30 AM

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.28.07 AM

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.27.08 AM

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.26.54 AM

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 9.28.18 AM

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/fB59j-uW8Fg/homophobic-bar-owner-goes-off-on-gay-couple-internet-goes-off-on-homophobic-bar-owner-20150921

Jack Larson, Best Known as ‘Jimmy Olsen’ in TV’s ‘Superman’, Dies at 87

Jack Larson, Best Known as ‘Jimmy Olsen’ in TV’s ‘Superman’, Dies at 87

Jack Larson

Jack Larson, an actor, playwright, and librettist best known for his role as Jimmy Olsen in the ’50s TV series Adventures of Superman, has died at his home in Brentwood, California.

In addition to his acting and writing, he also produced several films written and/or directed by his late longtime companion, the late Oscar nominee James Bridges, notes The Hollywood Reporter:

Larson and Bridges met when they were supporting players in the cast of Johnny Trouble (1957), starring Ethel Barrymore in her final film. They later formed a production company, and Larson produced such Bridges films as The Baby Maker (1970), Mike’s Murder (1984), Perfect (1985) and Bright Lights, Big City (1988).

Bridges died of cancer in June 1993 at age 57.

Larson, who also was close with actor Montgomery Clift until his death in 1966, shared a historical Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home on a Brentwood hillside with Bridges for years.

“It was obvious to anyone that since we lived together we were partners,” Larson told the Los Angeles Times in 2011. “We always went places together. We never pretended. I always did what I felt like doing. I never did publicity when I was very popular as Jimmy. The question [about being gay] never came up.”

The NYT, which first reported Olsen’s death, notes that his acting career ended after he became typecast because of his role in Superman:

Although Mr. Larson was pleased that Jimmy Olsen developed into a comic role, his fears of being typecast were realized. After a particularly upsetting encounter with the producer Mervyn LeRoy, he was advised by the actor Montgomery Clift, with whom Mr. Larson was having a romantic relationship, to stop putting himself in those casting situations. So Mr. Larson gave up acting and made a new career.

The post Jack Larson, Best Known as ‘Jimmy Olsen’ in TV’s ‘Superman’, Dies at 87 appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Jack Larson, Best Known as ‘Jimmy Olsen’ in TV’s ‘Superman’, Dies at 87

WATCH: Waka Flocka Flame: Caitlyn Jenner Is an 'Affront to God'

WATCH: Waka Flocka Flame: Caitlyn Jenner Is an 'Affront to God'

Rapper Waka Flocka Flame has taken to Twitter to extinguish a firestorm he created when he insulted Caitlyn Jenner and transgender people in general. Flame went on to bemoan the “dangers” posed for “traditional families” in Friday’s interview with New York radio station Power 101.5 show The Breakfast Club,

Commenting that young people are now “afraid” to be “husbands and wives,” Flame went on a diatribe about transgender people. He blames the media and pop culture for the recent focus on trans rights.

“Women are afraid to be a wife and young males is afraid to be men,” he said. “It’s like, it’s not cool, they’re not marketing that. They don’t market families and husbands and wives no more. They marketing young girls, you know what I’m saying? Transgenders — they’re marketing evil, man.”

The rapper went on to blame the devil for the rise of interest in the lives of transgender people. He said Caitlyn Jenner and the media attention her transition has spurred is an “affront to God.”

“You are who you are when God made you, not who you became after he did,” Flame told the radio hosts. “That’s how I just feel. You rebuking God, man. God didn’t put them feelings in you, man, that’s the Devil playing tricks on your mind. That’s a test from God. If you can’t outbeat [sic] that one task and you believe that, then you’re going to believe everything else.”

There’s been no reaction from Jenner as of press time. But an online backlash over his remarks prompted the rapper to tweet a clarification of his comments:

So now I’m #Homophobic because I don’t agree with #CatlinJenner Smh

— Waka Flocka Flame (@WakaFlocka) September 19, 2015

I have nothing against transgender people. I simply feel we need to be careful what our children see as “sensationalized”

— Waka Flocka Flame (@WakaFlocka) September 19, 2015

Children’s brains are a constant development to adulthood. And they pay attention to everything whether we want to accept it or not

— Waka Flocka Flame (@WakaFlocka) September 19, 2015

IM NOT HOMOPHOBIC I HAVE NOTHING AGAINST THE GAY COMMUNITY. IM STILL STANDING ON WHAT I SAID —

— Waka Flocka Flame (@WakaFlocka) September 19, 2015

Watch Flame’s Friday interview with The Breakfast Club about transgender issues and his controversial thoughts on other topics like race relations in America.

 

 

Bil Browning

www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/2015/9/21/watch-waka-flocka-flame-caitlyn-jenner-affront-god

Queer Women Win Big At 2015 Emmys

Queer Women Win Big At 2015 Emmys
Lesbians rocked the 2015 Emmy Awards. Here’s a look at four out queer women who were among this year’s big winners.

1. Jill Soloway, ‘Transparent’
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series
jill soloway emmy

2. Lisa Cholodenko, ‘Olive Kitteridge’
Outstanding Directing For A Limited Series, Movie Or A Dramatic Special
cholodenko emmy

3. Jane Anderson, ‘Olive Kitteridge’
Outstanding Writing For A Limited Series, Movie Or A Dramatic Special
jane anderson emmy

4. Jane Lynch, ‘Hollywood Game Night’
Outstanding Host For A Reality Or Reality-Competition Program
jane lynch emmy 2015

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



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REVIEW: Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy

REVIEW: Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy

Dinner on our first night in the wine region of Burgundy was booked at Chez Guy in the attractive village of Gevrey-Chambertin.

This is a small, modern bistro with very friendly and welcoming staff as well as quality food – presenting local specialities in an informal and relaxed style.

We started with poached eggs in a rich red wine sauce; on to slow-cooked beef cheeks in a pinot noir sauce; finishing with a plate of local cheeses.

Simple, uncomplicated food done really well. You can’t ask for much more than that.

Gay Star News reviews Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy
Gay Star News reviews Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy
Gay Star News reviews Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy
Gay Star News reviews Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy

Read more from Gareth Johnson

Read more restaurant reviews

The post REVIEW: Chez Guy – Gevrey-Chambertin, Burgundy appeared first on Gay Star News.

Gareth Johnson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/review-chez-guy-gevrey-chambertin-burgundy/