Mark Cuban Donates $1 Million for Dallas Police Response to Orlando Attack

Mark Cuban Donates $1 Million for Dallas Police Response to Orlando Attack

mark cuban trump

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban is giving the city’s police department $1 million to support its response to the terror attack that left 49 people dead at a gay Orlando nightclub last week.

The donation will pay for 16,000 hours of police overtime for enhanced counterterrorism efforts, including increased patrols in Dallas’ Oak Lawn neighborhood, which has been the site of dozens of unsolved anti-gay hate crimes in recent months.

Cuban is a longtime LGBT ally who serves on the advisory board of Athlete Ally, the nonprofit dedicated to ending homophobia in sports.

“I’m proud to be able to help the City of Dallas,” Cuban said of the donation in a news release.

Mayor Mike Rawlings praised Cuban for demonstrating “his devotion to his city by stepping up in a time of need.”

“In the wake of national tragedies, we often hear empty talk from politicians and other influencers,” Rawlings said. “With this pledge, Mark shows he is a man of action who cares deeply about his fellow Dallasites.”

Police Chief David Brown, who recently came under fire for partnering with Pastor Robert Jeffress of First Baptist Church, said: “These funds will be used primarily to protect the LGBT community. We will earmark and track the expenditure of these funds to ensure its effective use in creating a safe environment.”

The post Mark Cuban Donates $1 Million for Dallas Police Response to Orlando Attack appeared first on Towleroad.



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Eli Lieb and Brandon Skeie Sing Emotional Duet for Orlando, ‘Pulse’ – WATCH

Eli Lieb and Brandon Skeie Sing Emotional Duet for Orlando, ‘Pulse’ – WATCH

eli lieb brandon skeie

Out gay singers Eli Lieb and Brandon Skeie penned an emotional duet in the wake of the Orlando gay nightclub massacre aptly titled, “Pulse.”

The singers dedicated the song to the victims of the mass shooting. The most resonant lyric of the song might just be, “I shouldn’t have to change who I am to count as a human.”

Lieb and Skeie filmed their music video on the streets of West Hollywood on Sunday after writing the song in just a matter of hours.

Watch and listen, below.

Here are the lyrics to the song:

So you say this is human
Your heartbeat versus mine
Im in chains cause I’m choosing
showing love or living life
I shouldn’t have to leave where I stand
I shouldn’t have to change who I am
To count as a human
Feel my pulse
With your hand on my heart
You know it beats just as hard as yours
Feel my pulse
Feel my pulse
Can’t you see that im scarred
I’m just the same as you are so just
Feel my pulse
I wish I could reach them
And strip away what separates
It’s the same air we’re breathing
The same tears run down our face
So I don’t have to leave where I stand
And I don’t have to change who I am
To count as a human
Feel my pulse
With your hand on my heart
You know it beats just as hard as yours
Feel my pulse
Feel my pulse
Can’t you see that im scarred
I’m just the same as you are so just
Feel my pulse

The post Eli Lieb and Brandon Skeie Sing Emotional Duet for Orlando, ‘Pulse’ – WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.



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Convicted Gay Basher Kathryn Knott To Judge: Free Me!

Convicted Gay Basher Kathryn Knott To Judge: Free Me!

kathryn-knott-queerty

Talk about bad timing, Katie.

Barely 48 hours after the worst mass shooting in America, which happened inside a gay nightclub, convicted gay basher Kathryn Knott formally filed yet another request with the Common Pleas Court for early release from jail.

Related: Convicted Gay Basher Kathryn Knott’s Legal Troubles Just Got A Whole Lot Worse

Attorney William Brennan filed the request on Knott’s behalf urging the judge to release her from Riverside Correctional Facility in Northeast Philadelphia immediately. The Fireball aficionado has been in protective custody since February due to the media attention surrounding her case.

Philadelphia Magazine reports:

In the motion, Brennan argues that while Knott’s minimum release date based on the sentence is July 8th, she would have become eligible for early release on June 6th, because inmates can get credit for good behavior while in jail. According to the motion, Knott hasn’t had any behavioral issues while at Riverside, and she completed a court-ordered anger management class in April.

This is Knott’s second attempt at trying to weasel her way out of jail before her sentence is officially up. About a month after entering the facility, she tried negotiating with the judge for early release, asking to instead record a public service announcement about being nice to gay people. The judge said no.

Related: Kathryn Knott Thinks Jail Sucks, Petitions Judge To Be Released So She Can Record Anti-Bullying PSA Instead

Once Knott is released, she will be required to complete two years of probation, during which she will be forbidden from leaving the state of Pennsylvnaia. She will also be required to pay a $2,000 fine, though we wouldn’t be surprised if she tried to negotiate that down as well. After all, think of all the shots of Jägermeister $2,000 could buy.

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When Pride Weekend Doesn’t Quite Go The Way You’d Planned

When Pride Weekend Doesn’t Quite Go The Way You’d Planned

jimmy-fowlie-gay-pride

“The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry.”

Well we don’t know about the mice part, but the bit about men is spot-on.

Perhaps the adhesive glitter you bought winds up ruining your friend’s couch. Or maybe the guy you made eyes with from across the party was actually just looking for the bathroom.

Or, you know, you expected to be a star go-go boy and wind up being forced to play the “ugly caterpillar.”

Things happen.

Below, watch as one of those scenarios (and it ain’t the first two) plays out in the latest episode of Jimmy Fowlie‘s Go-go Boy Interrupted:

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Found Guilty of Murder as a Hate Crime, Elliot Morales Sentenced to 40 Years to Life in Prison: WATCH

Found Guilty of Murder as a Hate Crime, Elliot Morales Sentenced to 40 Years to Life in Prison: WATCH

Elliot Morales

carsonElliot Morales was sentenced to 40 years to life on Tuesday for the fatal stabbing of Brooklyn gay man Mark Carson (right) in 2013.

Morales was found guilty of murder as a hate crime in March. Representing himself during the trial, Morales claimed Carson’s murder was “a tragic accident.” He said it was “beyond my comprehension how someone like myself who happens to be bisexual and part of the L.G.B.T. community can be falsely accused and then convicted of a hate crime.”

Jurors rejected Morales’s claim that his intimate relationships with transgender women proved he was not homophobic and that his crime was not based on hatred toward gay people.

RELATED: FBI Investigating Whether Idaho Man’s Brutal Murder Was Anti-Gay Hate Crime: VIDEO

The New York Times reports:

Before his fatal encounter with Mr. Carson in May 2013, Mr. Morales stormed the Annisa restaurant on Barrow Street shouting antigay slurs and brandishing a weapon, after an employee there upbraided him for urinating on the sidewalk.

Mr. Morales left enraged and soon spotted Mr. Carson and Danny Robinson, a pair of friends from Brooklyn, dressed in shorts and tank tops. Mr. Morales taunted the men, calling them “gay wrestlers” and “faggots.” The friends challenged Mr. Morales’s mocking tone, and the confrontation moved into the shadow of a closed bookstore. There, Mr. Morales pulled out a revolver and shot Mr. Carson in the face while Mr. Robinson called the police.

Mr. Morales often flailed in offering explanations for his actions. After fleeing the scene of the murder, he told apprehending officers that he shot Mr. Carson “because he tried to act tough.” In a video taken during his arrest that Judge Bartley described as “chilling,” Mr. Morales laughed maniacally and exclaimed, “Diagnosis dead, doctor!”

At the trial itself, Mr. Morales claimed he acted in self-defense, afraid that the phone Mr. Robinson had retrieved was a weapon. The prosecution thwarted that notion, saying Mr. Morales had acted out of “bigotry” and “unjustifiable rage,” not fear.

Lead prosecutor Shannon Lucey described Morales as having “a lot of self-loathing issues.” She added that while the defendant had sexual relationships with trans people, he never appeared with them in public.

Elliot Morales sentenced 40 yrs to life for hate crime murder of Mark Carson, a 32-year-old gay black man. pic.twitter.com/m9llExq06n

— Telah Blac (@blacneighbor) June 14, 2016

Following the March verdict, one juror said Morales’s actions showed “he was kind of categorizing people” in a manner that exposed his anti-gay bias.

At sentencing, Judge A. Kirke Bartley said “I can’t help but perceive or observe the parallel tragedy in Orlando. That parallel is revealed in hatred, self-loathing, fear and death.”

In a statement following sentencing, Robinson said, “The guilt of asking [Carson] to go out with me that night, it’s like I feel it’s my fault.”

According to a 2015 FBI report, 18.6 percent of 5,462 single-bias hate crimes in 2014 were because of the victim’s sexual orientation while 47 percent were attributable to race.

Watch a report on the case from Pix 11, below.

 

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