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Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
Ali Muhammad Brown, charged with murder in double homicide case, at large in New Jersey seattletimes.com
Ali Muhammad Brown
by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor The suspect in a double homicide last month, Ali Muhammad Brown, 30, may have targeted the Gay men he allegedly killed by meeting them through the personal meet-up mobile app Grindr, according to court documents released Wednesday. Brown was charged with two counts of aggravated first-degree murder – a crime that could come with the death penalty, if convicted. Ahmed Said, 27, and Dwone Anderson-Young, 23, were killed early on the morning of June 1 near 29th Ave. S. and S. King St., and according to Senior Deputy Prosecutor Wyman Yip, “It is evident that the murders were premeditated and unprovoked and part of a common scheme or plan.” Both victims were shot in the head and there was no evidence of a struggle that preceded the killings. Yip wrote in charging documents, “The evidence from the
crime scene, Said’s vehicle, and the autopsies suggest that the victims were essentially executed.” Yip said there was no evidence that the killings were motivated by a robbery, drugs or another crime. The victims had been with friends at R Place located at Boylston Ave. & E. Pine St. Said told the group he was meeting a “friend” outside the club when they left. One of Said’s friends had the feeling that Said hadn’t met the “friend” before, because while Said was at R Place, he was constantly on his phone and appeared to be texting on Grindr. The group left the bar at closing time and crossed Boylston Ave., to meet with Said’s friend; but the man looked unfriendly and out of place. One of the friends in the group later told police he was “creeped out” by the man who was later identified as Brown. According to two witnesses, see Homicide page 18
SCOTUS gets one right: Hobby Lobby fallout: declines to review California law against conversion therapy
The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear an appeal of a California law prohibiting so-called “conversion therapy” for minors. The appeal had been filed by NARTH (National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality) and “ex-Gay” therapist David Pickup, but was rejected without comment in a June 30 announcement by the high court. The Southern Poverty Law Center has labeled NARTH an antiGay hate group, and calls them the “main source for anti-Gay junk science.” One of NARTH’s founding members, the late Charles Socari-
des, was the father of openly Gay former Clinton staffer and current cable TV pundit Richard Socarides. Pickup, who claims to have undergone successful conversion therapy in his 30s, runs a conversion practice in Glendale, California. Conversion – or “reparative” therapy as it is sometimes called – has been rejected by mainstream psychiatrists and psychologists. It often involves harsh or coercive measures, including aversion or isolation techniques, and has been likened to brainwashing or torture. The appeal by Liberty Counsel on behalf of NARTH and Pickup was rejected twice by the Ninth Circuit see SCOTUS page 7
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Within days of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in the Hobby Lobby case, religious groups sought to expand on the court’s ruling by claiming a right for employers to discriminate against LGBT employees on religious grounds. On June 30, a slim 5-4 majority of the high court held that some for-profit corporations can claim a First Amendment religious exemption from provisions of the Affordable Care Act. In her dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg warned that the court majority, “in a decision of startling breadth,” would allow corporations to opt out of almost any law that they find “incompatible with their sincerely held religious beliefs,” including laws against discrimination in the workplace. As if to prove Ginsburg’s argument true, a group of religious leaders sent a letter to President Obama urging him to include a religious exemption in his forthcoming executive order barring federal contactors from discriminating against LGBT employees.
glaAD
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer
Religious leaders ask Obama to exempt them from executive order barring discrimination against LGBT employees
“We are asking that an extension of protection for one group not come at the expense of faith communities whose religious identity and beliefs motivate them to serve those in need,” the letter states. Among those signing the letter were Fr. Larry Snyder, the CEO of Catholic Charities, and Stephen Schneck, the head of the Institute for Religion & Democracy (IRD).
Catholic Charities has in the past said it would close down its operations if forced to recognize samesex marriages or place orphans with Gay or Lesbian adoptive parents. IRD denounced the United Methodist Church in March for refusing to discipline clergy that conducted same-sex marriages. see Hobby Lobby page 8