Pride 2017 print edition

Page 12

POLITICS

Cuomo Puts First Gay Judge on State’s Highest Court Paul Feinman, on Manhattan appellate bench since 2012, wins Senate approval June 21 BY DUNCAN OSBORNE

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he Republican-controlled State Senate approved an out gay man to fill a vacancy on the Court of Appeals, New York State’s highest bench, just days after he was nominated by Governor Andrew Cuomo. “I’m overjoyed that Judge Paul Feinman has been confirmed by the State Senate to the New York State Court of Appeals as its first openly LGBT member,” said Senator Brad Hoylman, an out gay Manhattan Democrat. “This historic appointment by Governor Cuomo sends an important message to all New Yorkers about the importance of diversity and acceptance.” Cuomo announced the nomination on June 15 and the approval came on June 21, the last day of the legislative session. “It’s just an absolutely terrific day for the LGBT legal community in New York,” Matthew Skinner, executive director of the LGBT Bar Association of Greater New York (LeGaL), said on June 15. “It’s a day that has been long in coming… This doesn’t guarantee any outcomes, but we’re relieved to finally

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COURTESY: LGBT BAR ASSOCIATION OF GREATER NEW YORK

Appellate Division Justice Paul Feinman, if approved by the State Senate, will become the first out gay judge on the New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest bench.

have a seat at the table.” Feinman, an appellate judge in Manhattan, was first elected to Civil Court in 1996 and reelected in 2006. He has presided over criminal and civil cases and even briefly oversaw arbitration efforts on a small claims case in which Gay City News was a party. The newspaper won that case in a trial presided over by a different judge. In 2007, he was elected to a Su-

preme Court judgeship and then appointed to the state’s Appellate Division by Cuomo in 2012. In New York, the Supreme Court is the lowest level of trial courts. Feinman was the first out gay man to join the Appellate Division, the intermediate court below the Court of Appeals. Previously, Feinman was a staff attorney at the Legal Aid Society and a court attorney for a State Supreme Court judge. The Court of Appeals is comprised of seven judges who serve for 14-year terms. A seat opened up with the sudden death of Judge Sheila Abdus-Salaam in April. A quiet though “intense” lobbying campaign was launched to have Cuomo appoint an openly LGBTQ judge, Skinner said. “We were trying to get as many LGBT organizations in the city and individuals to speak out and say this was something that was really important,” Skinner said. The need for an openly LGBT judge on the state’s highest court was demonstrated in 2006 when the Court of Appeals denied gay and lesbian couples the right to marry in a 4 to 2 decision, saying it was up to the State Legislature to grant that right. The seventh

judge recused himself. The decision, which was written by Judge Robert Smith who is no longer on the court, was seen as particularly tough. “It was such a gut punch to the community,” Skinner said. “I think today we finally removed the stain of that decision… It’s hard to believe the decision would have been written in the vicious way that it was if the judges on the court had had to look another [LGBTQ] judge in the eye every day.” In a June 15 written statement, Cuomo said, “Justice Feinman will be an exceptional addition to New York’s highest court. He is a talented jurist who has dedicated his career to public service and standing up for a fairer and more just New York. While we continue to mourn the untimely passing of Judge Sheila Abdus-Salaam, Justice Feinman will help ensure that the Court of Appeals upholds the highest principles of law and fairness that embody the very best of New York.” Feinman, who through his law clerk declined comment, received a B.A. from Columbia in 1981 and a J.D. from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1985.

PULSE VIGIL, from p.6

each segment came on the rally stage and remained there. At the rally’s close, all 49 Human Beings were on stage. The vigil featured songs by Broadway performers, poetry readings, a dance performance, and music by the Lavender Light Gospel Choir and the Queer Urban Orchestra. In addition to the thousands who attended in person, 32,000 people watched it live on Facebook and the Facebook stream had 100,000 impressions. The gunman struck on Latinx night at the club and the dead and wounded were overwhelmingly Latinx and African-American. Carter, who is African-American, has a harrowing story. He was in the bathroom at Pulse when the shooting began. He first

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DONNA ACETO DONNA ACETO

Singer Aaron Paul was among the evening’s entertainers.

heard shots and then smelled gunpowder. He exited the bathroom and was shot in the leg by Mateen, who used an assault rifle. “I crawled to an area where my friend was,” Carter, who lost a brother to gun violence when he

was 15, told Gay City News following his speech. “I called the police.” He lay in one spot for roughly three hours and continued to hear gun shots the entire time. Mateen was wandering the club and ran-

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, Jr., addresses the vigil.

domly shooting people who were lying on the ground. His was shot a second time in the pelvis by Mateen as he lay on the floor. That second shot caused serious dam-

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PULSE VIGIL, continued on p.24

June 22 - July 05, 2017 | GayCityNews.nyc


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