Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Pride parade honors club victims

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CINCINNATI — Organizers read the names of the Orlando gay nightclub shooting victims and held a moment of silence Saturday during Cincinnati’s parade and festival events celebratin­g Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgende­r Pride Month.

The celebratio­n took place amid the same kind of increased security put in place last weekend at gay pride events in more than a half dozen cities, including Chicago, Denver and New Orleans.

Gay organizati­ons in San Francisco and New York plan to hold their gay pride parades — traditiona­lly among the biggest in the U.S. — on Sunday.

Organizers in Cincinnati expected attendance to top last year’s estimated 90,000 people. They said the slayings this month in Orlando raised interest in participat­ion.

“This year we march, once again, to show that we will not give in to hate,” Cincinnati Pride co-presidents Shawn Baker and Brooklyn SteeleTate said in a statement. “Our community always has been and always will be about love and acceptance. We will march with pride toward progress. We will never let hate or fear win.”

No problems were reported in Cincinnati. Many of the participan­ts took time to remember the 49 people killed and more than 50 wounded when Omar Mateen opened fire inside the Pulse nightclub in Orlando.

Some carried photos of the victims while others held signs saying “We Are Orlando.”

City officials in Cincinnati made public assurances that they were ready to keep the parade and festival safe.

Cincinnati Police Lt. Col. Paul Neudigate pledged “a very robust” police presence that included bike patrols, foot patrols, plaincloth­es officers and other “support elements.”

Some participan­ts expressed concern about gun rights activists’ plans for an “open carry outreach” on Saturday.

Organizer Jeffrey Smith has led pro-gun demonstrat­ions at Ohio college campuses and elsewhere and said the mission is education about guns and self-defense.

 ?? CARA OWSLEY/THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER VIA AP ?? Cincinnati Police officer Steve Edwards laughs with Brooklyn Steele-Tate, left, and Tyese Rainz before the start of the Cincinnati Pride parade Saturday.
CARA OWSLEY/THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER VIA AP Cincinnati Police officer Steve Edwards laughs with Brooklyn Steele-Tate, left, and Tyese Rainz before the start of the Cincinnati Pride parade Saturday.

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