Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 30 Volume 42
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Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
Suspect in June double homicide arrested in New Jersey Seattletimes.com
Al Muhammed Brown
by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor It is bittersweet because no matter what, Al Muhammed Brown’s apprehension will not bring back the two lives he took, but on July 18, New Jersey authorities arrested the man indicted in the double shooting of two Gay men of color in Seattle’s Leschi neighborhood. For now, at least the families have that much to comfort them. But soon begins the trial. On June 1, Ali Muhammed Brown, 30, executed Dwone Anderson-Young, 23, and Ahmed Said, 27. Seattle’s LGBTQ community would soon learn that Brown, a man said to harbor radical Islamic beliefs and although he was supposed to register as a sex offender, he did not, posed as Gay on the mobile hookup app Grindr to attract his victims. Brown even went so far as to pick the two young men up outside of popular Gay nightclub, R Place, before shooting the two
young men to death in such a way that King County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Wyman Yip called the slayings “extremely violent, senseless and seemingly unprovoked.” At first, immediately after the horrible murders, there looked to be a sign of hope when Matalepuna Malu, 26, turned himself in after police named him as a suspect, saying he wanted to clear his name. Malu’s family maintained his innocence from the start, believing so much that he did not commit the murders, at one point concerned family members showed up at City Hall to confront the mayor on the situation. Just as Malu and his family had said, his alibi checked out. Malu could be seen on video walking into a casino around the time of the double homicide in the Central District. The casino wasn’t anywhere near the area where the crime took place. Following Malu’s release and a candlelight vigil held near where see Suspect page 4
Obama signs Executive Order PrEP gets seal of barring anti-LGBT discrimination approval in new study frontiersla.com
CBS NEWS
Adherence still the key factor
A PrEP pill, Truvada
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer President Obama signs Executive Order
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer President Obama signed an executive order July 21 protecting many LGBT workers from discrimination in the workplace. The two-part document amends previous orders by Richard Nixon on federal employment and by Lyndon Johnson on protections for employees of federal contactors.
Executive Order 11478, signed by Nixon in 1969, establishes nondiscrimination rules for federal employees. Bill Clinton added protection for sexual orientation in 1998, and Obama’s amendment adds protection for gender identity. Obama also amended Executive Order 11246, originally signed by Lyndon Johnson in 1965, to bar federal contractors from discrimi-
nating on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. An estimated 20% of the U.S. workforce will be covered by the president’s order. “It doesn’t make much sense, but today in America, millions of our fellow citizens wake up and go to work with the awareness that they could lose their job, not see Obama page 7
A new study of PrEP medications by NIH (National Institutes of Health) scientists shows that the HIV prevention method remains effective even if users skip occasional doses. The study, released at the International AIDS Conference in Melbourne, Australia, and simultaneously published in The Lancet medical journal, involved 1,600 HIV-negative men who have sex with men and Transgender women in 11 locations, including Chicago,
San Francisco, Boston, Thailand, Rio de Janeiro, and Cape Town. According to the findings, PrEP provided 100% protection among participants who took the pill four times or more every week. Those who took the pill two or three times a week registered a protection rate of about 84%. Those who took fewer than two tablets in the same period had no protection at all. One of the worries about PrEP as an HIV preventative has always been adherence to the dosage regimen, but the latest study seems to indicate that even moderately see PrEP page 8