The Reporter (Vacaville)

Governor asked to pardon late gay rights leader

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> The California Legislatur­e’s LGBTQ and black caucuses on Tuesday asked Gov. Gavin Newsom to posthumous­ly pardon a civil rights leader who was jailed for having gay sex nearly 70 years ago.

Bayard Rustin was a confidant of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., along with being an organizer of the 1963 March on Washington. He also helped plan other nonviolent boycotts and protests to end racial discrimina­tion.

In 1953, he was arrested on a charge of vagrancy when he was caught having sex with two men in a parked car after he gave a speech in Pasadena as part of a lecture tour on anti-colonial struggles in West Africa, Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco and Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber wrote on behalf of the caucuses.

He served 50 days in Los Angeles County jail and had to register as a sex offender before returning to his home state of New York. He died in 1987,

“He deserves to be remembered as one of the towering figures in the cause of justice and freedom, both as a black man and as a gay man,” Weber said. “A pardon ... would ensure his legacy and his place in history is unsullied by this event.”

The Democratic governor said in a supportive statement that he will closely consider the request.

“In California and across the country, sodomy laws were used as legal tools of oppression,” Newsom said. “They were used to stigmatize and punish LGBTQ individual­s and communitie­s and warn others what harm could await them for living authentica­lly.”

The lawmakers said Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey supports a pardon, though her office did not immediatel­y comment.

Rustin’s inner circle knew he was gay, the lawmakers said, but his arrest embarrasse­d his religious and political associates, particular­ly after U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina read Rustin’s arrest file into the Congressio­nal Record.

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