Los Angeles Times

Illinois will end ‘gay panic’ defense

Being LGBTQ can no longer be blamed for provoking attackers, a new state law says.

- By Jaclyn Cosgrove jaclyn.cosgrove@latimes.com

When 21-year-old Matthew Shepard was punched, pistol-whipped, tied to a fence and left to die in 1998, his killers’ attorneys said the attackers were triggered by Shepard making sexual advances toward them.

When a 14-year-old California boy gunned down his gay classmate in 2008, his attorneys argued that it was because the victim provoked him by flirting with him.

And after a 21-year-old transgende­r woman in Harlem was beaten to death in 2013, one of her attackers said he hurt her out of “blind fury” after he flirted with her and then realized she was transgende­r.

For decades, LGBTQ people have been brutally attacked or killed and then blamed for their own deaths in cases where attorneys try, sometimes successful­ly, to use a “gay panic” or “trans panic” defense.

Starting Monday, attorneys in Illinois will be barred from using the approach after a state law passed — without a single “no” vote in either the state House or Senate — making it the second state in the country to ban the defense in the courtroom.

Anthony Michael Kreis, who drafted the Illinois legislatio­n, said the passage of the “gay panic” defense law has boosted efforts in other states to enact similar bans.

Kreis has heard from advocates in Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island and New Jersey, among others, asking for help pushing their own bills. Similar legislatio­n has been discussed by lawmakers in New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia. Other states where the defense has been allowed include Maryland, Texas and Washington.

Kreis said because the LGBTQ community is at higher risk for violence, the law comes at an important time. This year marked the deadliest on record for the transgende­r community, with at least 28 people shot and killed across the United States, according to the Human Rights Campaign.

“It sends an important message to the LGBTQ community that the state will protect them equally and the courts will not be allowed to entertain these types of defenses, which victimize victims again,” Kreis said of the new Illinois law.

There isn’t an exact definition, but a gay or trans panic defense is essentiall­y when people don’t realize they’re interactin­g with an LGBTQ person and become so overcome with rage when they realize it that they physically attack the person in the heat of the moment.

It’s estimated that gay and trans panic defenses have been used in at least 23 states since the 1960s, according to the Williams Institute, a think tank at the UCLA School of Law.

Gay and trans panic defenses have allowed people accused of killing LGBTQ people to receive lesser sentences, and in some cases, avoid any punishment, according to the institute.

California was the first state to ban the defense, in 2014, and the American Bar Assn. pushed for a ban in 2013.

In Washington state, a bill banning gay and trans panic defenses is expected to be introduced in the coming weeks for the next legislativ­e session.

“It’s a defense that allows people to perpetuate hate crimes,” said Monisha Harrell, Equal Rights Washington chairperso­n. “It is saying you’re surprised that somebody might be different than you, whatever that difference is, and that that would allow you to initiate violence, and in some cases, lethal violence. That should never be a defense.”

Cynthia Lee, a criminal law professor at George Washington University, said although she understand­s the underlying sentiment supporting the passage of these types of bans, there could be unintended consequenc­es.

In her research on gay and trans panic defenses, Lee has found that in most cases, the usage of the defense is “reprehensi­ble,” largely playing off stereotype­s about gay men or transgende­r women.

But a legislativ­e ban might not be the best solution, she said. Social science research has shown that juries can be affected by attorneys calling out bigotry. She said there is less research on what happens when LGBTQ stereotype­s are used, but it brings up an interestin­g argument.

For example, if a defense attorney makes an argument largely based on racial stereotype­s, and a prosecutor calls that out, research has found that a jury will often respond by treating a black defendant the same as they would a white defendant, she said.

If attorneys were properly trained on how to respond to a gay or trans panic defense when it was brought up, it could potentiall­y help a jury see the problems in making that argument.

“Instead of banning these arguments, confront them head on and challenge them in court,” Lee said. “The prosecutio­n should be aware of the bias. Whenever the defense tries to make these kinds of arguments, [prosecutor­s] should try to challenge them head on.”

Advocates say that the sentiment behind panic defenses is a problem, even outside the courtroom.

Lou Weaver, transgende­r programs coordinato­r with Equality Texas, said one example was the reaction of law enforcemen­t to the recent killing of Brandi Seals, a 26-year-old transgende­r woman, in Houston.

After Seals was killed, Detective Fil Waters of the Houston Police Department told a local TV station: “The fact that we have a man in women’s clothing, the speculatio­n is he’s been working the street, that someone picks up and then realizes he’s not what he’s representi­ng himself to be and take this kind of ultimate action.”

Weaver said the detective assumed Seals was a sex worker because she was transgende­r, and didn’t have informatio­n to prove that was her profession.

Regardless, his comments had a “trans panic” argument within them, Weaver said. “Unfortunat­ely, I think it will still be seen as a valid reason for hurting somebody. Defense attorneys are ruthless, and they have one job — to prove their client is not guilty, and they will do whatever it takes.”

 ?? Brian Cassella Associated Press ?? IN THE ANDERSONVI­LLE neighborho­od, people attend an LGBTQ Chicago Equality rally in June.
Brian Cassella Associated Press IN THE ANDERSONVI­LLE neighborho­od, people attend an LGBTQ Chicago Equality rally in June.

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