
Ryan Skipper's Killer Found
Guilty
Today, Joseph
Bearden, one of the two accused killers of Ryan Skipper, was
found guilty of second-degree murder and robbery.
On March 15, 2007, Ryan Skipper was stabbed 19 times and left
to die on a dirt road in Polk County, Florida. His death is a
bloody reminder of the anti-gay hatred faced by lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people in our state.
Just days ago, a prosecution witness revealed that shortly
after the killing, Joseph Bearden, the defendant, said, "He
felt he was doing the world a favor by getting rid of one more
faggot."
The 19 stab wounds that Ryan Skipper suffered are what the FBI
calls 'overkill'. That's when the violence in an assault is
beyond what would be necessary for a robbery and more than would
even be required to take someone's life. Overkill is a key
indicator of a hate crime.
During his closing statement, State Attorney Castillo said
the brutality of Ryan's murder indicated, "hatred,
contempt and utter disregard for another human being because he
was gay."
Hate crimes are directed at groups of people. They are
intended to make an entire community afraid simply because of
who they are.
But hate crimes are only effective as a two-step dance: first
the offender sends fear into people's hearts with a heinous act
of violence. Then leaders around them act like nothing more
happened than a car theft gone wrong. No action. No public
acknowledgment of what has happened. No commitment to ensuring
this never happens again. Their silence is as terrifying as the
violence itself.
Take action. Tell Gov Crist
and Attorney General McCollum that they must refuse to be
the second-step in the cycle of anti-gay hate violence. Tell
them to speak out, to turn the tide and declare that gay and
transgender people are valued members of our society and that
hate violence will not be tolerated against any group.

|