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Doubtfire SF LGBT center to arson oversee Pink Saturday defendant: ‘I’m a good person’
Vol. 45 • No. 12 • March 19-25, 2015
by Seth Hemmelgarn
by Matthew S. Bajko
T
he San Francisco LGBT Community Center has agreed to oversee this year’s Pink Saturday party in the Castro over Pride weekend, the Bay Area Reporter has learned. The center is seeking to hire an event pro-
Castro Street is jampacked during Pink Saturday 2012.
ducer on a contract basis to help plan for the party, set to take place June 27. Gay District 8 Supervisor Scott Wiener, who lives near where the party is held, and LGBT center officials on Thursday will publicly announce the new community sponsor for the yearly event. See page 8 >>
SFPD probes Program sprouts friendships for LGBT seniors racist, antigay texts J
Rick Gerharter
T
he transgender woman accused of setting fire to the house made famous in the 1993 film Mrs. Doubtfire said in a jailhouse interview last weekend, “I’m a good person.” Courtesy Jeanette McSwain “I didn’t do any of that stuff,” Tyqwon Tyqwon Eugene Eugene Welch told the Welch Bay Area Reporter. But there’s enough evidence in the case to hold Welch, 26, for trial on most of the charges against her, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Brendan Conroy ruled Thursday, March 12 after a two-day preliminary hearing. See page 9 >>
by Matthew S. Bajko
by Seth Hemmelgarn
T
he San Francisco Police Department is investigating four officers for allegedly being involved in exchanges of racist and homophobic text messages. The texts, most of Rick Gerharter which are race-related, recently came to light Police Chief in documents filed Greg Suhr Friday, March 13 in the federal court case against former police Sergeant Ian Furminger, who was convicted in December of stealing and other crimes. The district attorney’s and public defender’s offices are reviewing cases in which the officers were involved. According to the court filing, in one October 2011 exchange, Furminger wrote to at least one other officer, “I was trying to be nice to you as everyone knows your gay,” and “I love calling you a fag! Good enough?” In a May 2012 message, he told at least one See page 18 >>
asmine Gee first began visiting Felicia Elizondo on a weekly basis nearly two years ago. Their Monday morning get-togethers can consist of simply watching trashy TV shows together or walking Elizondo’s two canine companions or going on excursions around town or once to a North Bay casino. “We are not high rollers,” joked Gee, 66, noting the women limited themselves to betting just $20. For Elizondo, 68, who lives in a one-bedroom apartment in the Lower Haight with her dogs Gypsy Rose Lee, a black Pomeranian mix, and Simon, a mixed breed cocker spaniel, the visits ensure at least once a week she has a social outlet. “Seniors get very lonely. I don’t drink no more. I don’t smoke. There is no reason for me to be at the bar scene, that is just not who I am now,” said Elizondo. “Jasmine has an attitude of live and let live. She is just a good listener and a person to communicate with. Sometimes I just need someone to be there to sit and watch TV. We don’t have to talk.” The pair teamed up through the Friendly Visitor program operated by Openhouse, the San Francisco-based agency that provides services to LGBT seniors. The transgender women of color initially had met through their activist work, so when Elizondo, who is MexicanAmerican, saw that Gee, who is of Chinese descent, had volunteered to be a visitor, she requested that they be matched. “I thought I could teach her a few tricks,”
Rick Gerharter
Jasmine Gee from Openhouse’s Friendly Visitor program, left, walks Gypsy Rose Lee along with her friend, Felicia Elizondo, who is walking Simon.
joked Elizondo. “We are two different nationalities and sometimes we butt heads together. But we always come out being friends.” Just as rewarding for Gee, who had been married to a woman and came out as transgender in 2000, is being able to discuss their shared experiences. “It’s very enjoyable because although I connect with a lot of different communities,
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straight as well as LGBT, I am with one of my own,” said Gee. “As seniors we mutually learn from each other and mutually help each other. It’s a dual role. I love to step back and hear her bits of wisdom.” To which Elizondo jokingly responded, “And I have a lot of it.” See page 17 >>