Mathew Shepard, not dead yet. |
Just after midnight on October 7, 1998 a 21 year old University of Wyoming student left a Laramie bar with two townies. Instead of giving him a promised ride home,
the pair drove him to a remote road near town, robbed him, pistol whipped him and tied him with out-stretched arms on a barbed wire fence. They left him for dead. 18 hours later a local rancher discovered
what he first thought was a scarecrow.
Barely alive the young man was flown to Poudre Valley
Hospital, in
Fort Collins, Colorado where he died early on October 12 without ever having
regained consciousness.
The case might never have been more than a local tragedy
and sensation except for one thing. Matthew Shepard was Gay and apparently targeted by his assailants,
Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney because he was “a faggot.” The case became a national cause
célèbre and the impetus for adding sexual orientation or identity to protected status under state
and Federal hate crime statutes.
Shepard was born in Casper, Wyoming on
December 1, 1976. He was the eldest of
two sons of petroleum engineer Dennis and his wife Judy. Matthew attended Casper public schools
through his junior year in high school. When his father took a job with the Saudi
oil company Aramco in Dhahran
he was sent to complete his schooling to The American
School in Switzerland, the choice of
many corporate families working
abroad. He was a friendly, outgoing
student who was selected a peer counselor at both of his high schools. He was open about his sexual orientation and
strove for greater acceptance of all people.
While on a school sponsored trip to Morocco that year he was assaulted and raped which caused him
bouts of severe depression and panic attacks.
On returning to the U.S. Shepard
briefly attended classes at Catawba College in North Carolina
and Casper College, his home town community college. He moved to Denver, Colorado,
the metropolis of the Mountain States and plunged into the urban Gay
life style. At some point he may have
become HIV positive.
Shepard enrolled in the University of Wyoming, with a
major in political science and foreign relations with a minor in
languages. He was fluent in three languages. He enjoyed the theater and had parts in several Casper
College and community theater plays. He was very active in politics and
campaigned for several candidates and held a sincere concern for human rights. He was selected as the student representative for the Wyoming Environmental Council. But
Shepard also enjoyed several sports
including soccer, swimming, running, camping, hunting, fishing and skiing, in
addition to his interests in dancing and theater.
Despite his outward confidence, Shepard was still subject
to depression and like many young people dabbled in drugs.
Shepard met Henderson and McKinney at the Fireside Lounge. All
accounts agree that he left with them voluntarily. Henderson and McKinney switched stories while
on trial, especially after Henderson struck
a deal to avoid the death penalty
and agreed to testify against McKinney.
The pair first said they were just responding in Shepard’s request for a ride home and killed him in a gay panic when he came on to them. After the two men’s girl friends both
testified that they had told them that they had planned to find a gay man to
rob, they changed their stories. They
maintained that it was simply a robbery gone wrong.
Henderson was sentenced to two terms
of life in prison. McKinney was convicted of felony murder partly on Henderson’s
testimony. The prosecutors sought the death penalty but as the jury
deliberated, Shepard’s parents agreed to spare McKinney the death
sentence. He received the same sentence
as his partner. Both are still in
prison.
In the dark days directly
after the murder and through the long trial process Judy Shepard became an
outspoken advocate for the safety of Gays and Lesbians. She was not alone. The small Unitarian Universalist congregations in Laramie, Cheyenne, Casper and Ft. Collins all became safe havens for the Gay community, offered
solace and counseling and joined with Judy Shepard in demanding that the state
of Wyoming add gays to hate crime protection.
It was notable and heroic work in an often hostile environment.
Judy Shepard founded and
still leads the Matthew Shepard
Foundation which took the lead on advocating for hate crime protection and
is currently active in countering school bullying.
After Shepard’s murder the Wyoming legislature considered a bill
defining certain attacks motivated by victim identity as hate crimes. The measure failed on a 30-30 tie in the
state House of Representatives. Judy
Shepard and her supporters turned to seeking Federal legislation. President Bill Clinton supported
efforts to extend Federal hate crime legislation to include homosexuals, women,
and people with disabilities. The effort failed in the House in 1999. The next year both houses of Congress passed legislation; but it was stripped out in conference committee.
Attempts to revive the issue failed
repeatedly until Rep. John Conyers (D-Michigan) introduced the Mathew Shepard Act with 171 co-sponsors
in 2007. It passed the House and a similar measure passed the Senate.
President George W. Bush indicated
he would veto the measure and
conservatives erupted with a firestorm of opposition. In an attempt to avoid a veto, the measure
was attached to a Department of Defense
Authorization bill. That bill,
however, was opposed by anti-war
Democrats and the measure failed again.
In 2009 with the support of
newly elected President Barak Obama,
the bill cleared the House again by a wide margin. The Senate again attached the legislation to
a Defense Authorization bill, which passed.
This time the conference committee included the amendment, which had not
been in the House version. Sent to the
House, the Authorization bill with the expansion of hate crime protection it
was passed. A cloture vote overcame a
threatened Senate filibuster and the upper chamber passed the bill on a 64-35. The President signed it into law on October
29, 2009. Almost immediately
conservatives have called for its repeal.
Volunteers with angel wings shield Shepard's funeral from Westboro Baptist pickets. |
The Shepard case has aroused
passions on all sides. The infamous Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas led by anti-Gay bigot Fred Phelps generated some of its first
nationwide attention by picketing Shepard’s funeral with signs with such as
“Matt Shepard rots in Hell”, “AIDS Kills Fags Dead” and “God Hates Fags”. They continued to demonstrate regularly
during the trials of the accused murderers. As a counter protest during
Henderson’s trial, Romaine Patterson,
a friend of Shepard’s, organized a group who surrounded the demonstrators
wearing white robes and gigantic angel wings to block the view. The action inspired similar responses to
later forays by Phelps including his protests at the funerals of soldiers
killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
:
The Laramie Project, a play by Moisés Kaufman and members of the Tectonic Theater Project premiered in
Denver in 2002 and went on to be presented at the Union Square Theater in New
York. It was presented in Laramie in
2010. It has since been produced both
professionally and by amateur theater groups around the country and
overseas. A version has also been
adapted for use in high schools.
Predictably presentations of the play have routinely attracted protests
by Fred Phelps and others. HBO commissioned a film of The
Laramie Project, also written and directed by Kaufman which is also
frequently shown.
The Matthew Shepard Story premiered on NBC on March 9, 2002, the same night as
HBO's The Laramie Project. It starred Shane Meier as Shepard, Sam
Waterston as Dennis Shepard and Stockard
Channing as Judy Shepard. The film won an Emmy in 2002 for Channing’s performance. The ending featured Elton John’s song about Shepard, American
Triangle, from his album Songs
from the West Coast.
Ten years after Shepard's murder,
members of the Tectonic Theater Project returned to Laramie to conduct
follow-up interviews with residents featured in the original play. Those
interviews were turned into a companion piece, entitled The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later. The play
debuted as readings at nearly 150 theatres across the US and internationally on
October 12, 2009—the 11th anniversary of Matthew Shepard’s death. Opening night many of the venues were whose
opening was linked by webcam to New York City where Judy Shepard and the play’s
producers and writers, and actress Glenn
Close spoke.
In 2004 ABC television’s 20/20
made a controversial re-visit of the case in which it depicted Shepard as a crack user and portrayed the murder as drug deal gone bad rather than a hate
crime. The program’s assertions have
been refuted by Judy Shepard and by the original prosecutors on the case.
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