Grand marshals for Oakland Pride
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Help is on the Way
Dusty Queers
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Vol. 44 • No. 34 • August 21-27, 2014
Probe of SF man’s death continues Rick Gerharter
Newly sworn-in justice of the California Court of Appeal Therese Stewart is enrobed by her wife, Carole Scagnetti, following her investiture and swearingin ceremony August 15.
Stewart joins CA appellate bench by Matthew S. Bajko
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host of California appellate justices, as well as a state Supreme Court nominee, joined LGBT community leaders and San Francisco’s legal establishment to witness the swearing-in of the Golden State’s first lesbian appeals court justice. More than 150 people gathered in the auditorium of the State Office Building in San Francisco’s Civic Center Friday, August 15 to see Therese M. Stewart take her oath of office to a seat on Division Two of the First District Court of Appeal. J. Anthony Kline, who has long been friends with Stewart and is the acting presiding justice for Division Two, administered the oath. A clearly nervous Stewart flubbed the second and third lines of the oath, and after she correctly repeated the fourth, Kline joked to her, “Good.” Stewart’s wife, Carole Scagnetti, herself an attorney, then enrobed her. “Her choices will be energized by her passion for justice and rooted in her deep generosity of spirit,” said Scagnetti, adding that, “I am so proud of you today and so proud of us as a family.” Formerly City Attorney Dennis Herrera’s chief deputy, Stewart is best known for litigating the state’s marriage equality lawsuits that secured marriage rights for same-sex couples, first at the state level in 2008 and then, in 2013, as part of the federal litigation. She applied for a judicial appointment with Governor Jerry Brown last fall and was notified two days before this year’s Pride parade in late June of her nomination to a vacancy on the appellate court. Hailed for her legal advocacy skills, Stewart said she had bequeathed her role as an advocate to her former colleagues in the city attorney’s office now that she has to be an impartial justice. See page 9 >>
by Seth Hemmelgarn Mourners place flowers on an altar in Duboce Park August 13 to memorialize Bryan “Feather” Higgins, a Faerie who was severely injured and taken off life support during the vigil.
P
olice are continuing their investigation into the death of a gay San Francisco man who was found injured in the Duboce Triangle neighborhood last week. Bryan Higgins, 31, was found on the
ground at about 7:30 a.m. Sunday, August 10 near Church Street and Duboce Avenue. He died three days later in San Francisco General Hospital after his family took him off life support. Friends and family are recalling their love See page 10 >> Rick Gerharter
Sarria’s activism recalled a year after death
Rick Gerharter
San Francisco’s Openhouse agency organized a panel to remember and honor gay community leader Jose Sarria on the first anniversary of his death. On the panel, Gerard Koskovich, left, from the GLBT Historical Society, tells of how Sarria’s role has been overlooked by historians. Others on the panel, from left, are Galilea, friend and Absolute Empress XLI; friend Robbie Robinson; Juliet Demeter, project archivist at the GLBT Historical Society and archivist for the Jose Sarria Papers; Marlena, Absolute Empress XXV; and moderator Donna Sachet, Absolute Empress XXX.
by David-Elijah Nahmod
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ong before queer activists marched and chanted down the streets of San Francisco, Jose Sarria lived his life as an out, proud gay man. On the one-year anniversary of his death last August 19 at the age of 90, LGBT leaders and others paid tribute to Sarria as a packed crowd
filled the second floor auditorium of San Francisco’s LGBT Community Center for “Honoring Our Hero, Remembering Jose Julio Sarria.” It was standing room only, with many members of the Imperial Court System, for which he laid the groundwork, appearing in full regalia. Co-founding the Imperial Court System was another of Sarria’s many accomplish-
ments. The Imperial Court is now a goodwill ambassador for the community and has raised much-needed funds for HIV related causes. Sarria was a trailblazer. During the 1950s, he was a popular drag performer at the Black Cat, a North Beach gay bar that closed in 1964. In addition to addressing serious issues through See page 3 >>
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