seaQwa.com | Gay news -- logo
Welcome to seaQwa.com. Sign in | Join | Help
in Search
Partners
QueerFilter.com RSS feeds 1zone.net social gay news aggregator
Activism Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory
Add Qnews to Netvibes
Technorati Blog Finder
Seattle blogs
Gay blogs
Now in Q
Northwest gay news
Anglican schism
Marriage equality
Friday, March 28

Classroom shooting of 15-year-old Larry King sparks outrage (and finally attracts national press attention)

Source: Associated Press via Washington Post


[seaQwa editor's note: The in-depth AP story by Greg Risling summarized here has been carried widely by US and international papers. It finally seems to have given this tragic story wider circulation -- something that's been unaccountably missing in the five weeks since the shooting.

The LA Times and other California papers have -- as one can see from the summaries here -- given it extensive coverage while national press mostly ignored the story until now. It is true, as Risling writes here, that "King's death has drawn national attention," but it has attracted that attention mostly because of web-based accounts and the efforts of gay rights groups -- particularly GLSEN, Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network, which has helped coordinate national rallies for King.] 

OXNARD, Calif. (AP) Larry King was a gay eighth-grader who used to come to school in makeup, high heels and earrings. And when the other boys made fun of him, he would boldly tease them right back by flirting with them.

That may have been what got him killed.

On Feb. 12, another student, Brandon McInerney, 14, shot him twice in the head at the back of the computer lab at their junior high school, police say.

The slaying of the 15-year-old boy has alarmed gay rights activists and led to demands that middle schools do more to educate youngsters about discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Police would not discuss McInerney's motive. But the day before the shooting, King told McInerney he liked him, eighth-grader Eduardo Segure told the Ventura County Star.

If King had flirted with the other boy, "that can be very threatening to someone's ego and their sense of identity," said Jaana Juvonen, a psychology professor at the University of California, Los Angeles.

McInerney was jailed on $770,000 bail on an adult murder charge that could put him behind bars for life. Prosecutors also filed a hate-crime enhancement, which could bring three more years if McInerney is found to have acted on the basis of the victim's race, religion, nationality or sexual orientation.

The shooting has galvanized Oxnard, a city of nearly 200,000 people about 60 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Several vigils for King have been held, including a march that drew about 1,000 people to this strawberry-growing section of Ventura County.

Like the killings of some other gay students -- such as Matthew Shepard in Wyoming, and Brandon Teena, the Nebraska transsexual whose story was the subject of the movie "Boys Don't Cry" -- King's death has drawn national attention and outraged many gays.

Comic Ellen DeGeneres, who is a lesbian, said on her talk show Feb. 28: "Larry was not a second-class citizen. I'm not a second-class citizen. It is OK if you are gay."

Students at E.O. Green Junior High said the other kids used to taunt King, call him names and throw wet paper towels at him in the boys' restroom, and he would bravely fire back by flirting with them and chasing them.

"He didn't like people insulting him," said his friend Miriam Lopez, 13. "Larry was brave enough to bring high heels and makeup to school and he wasn't afraid of anything."

Full article: Shooting of Gay Student Sparks Outcry - washingtonpost.com

Posted by NewsEditor on Mar 28 2008, 02:52 PM [Permalink]


About this blog Frequently updated throughout the day, this section presents a broad array of news items from the global press. Each story is presented in an quick-read digest. To get the full story from the original source, click the "Source" link on the first line.
Syndication