“Had this been a heterosexual, this never would have made the national news.”
—Bill McKinney
F
O R T C O L L I N S, Colo., Oct. 12 —A
gay University of Wyoming student who was pistol-whipped and lashed to
a fence post in an attack denounced nationwide as a hate crime died early
today from his injuries.
Matthew Shepard, 21, died while on life support, Poudre Valley Hospital spokesman Gary Kimsey said. Shepard had been in a coma since bicyclists found him tethered to the post in near-freezing temperatures outside Laramie, Wyo., on Wednesday. Police have said robbery was the primary motive for the attack. But gay rights groups and others assailed the beating and called on Wyoming legislators to adopt laws to deter crimes against homosexuals.
Humiliation
May Have Led to Crime
Before Shepard’s death, Russell Arthur Henderson, 21,
and Aaron James McKinney, 22, had been charged with attempted murder, kidnapping
and aggravated robbery. Their girlfriends—Chastity Vera Pasley, 20, and
Kristen Leann Price, 18—were charged with being accessories after the fact.
McKinney’s girlfriend, Ms. Price,
and his father, Bill McKinney, told The Denver Post that the two
men never set out to kill the 5-foot-2, 105-pound Shepard. Instead, they
said the two wanted to get back at Shepard for making passes at McKinney
in front of his friends Tuesday night in a campus bar.
“I guess they [the people in
the bar] knew that Matt Shepard was gay and maybe it got around that Aaron
was gay or something,” Ms. Price said in a story published Sunday. “Later
on, Aaron did say he told him he was gay just to rob him, because he wanted
to take his money for embarrassing him.”
The elder McKinney said there
was no excuse for the crime but the story had been blown out of proportion.
“Had this been a heterosexual
these two boys decided to take out and rob, this never would have made
the national news,” he told the Post. “Now my son is guilty before
he’s even had a trial.”
Friends Surprised
Friends of Henderson and McKinney said they were surprised
by the allegations.
“They were quiet,” said Heather
Dunmire, 20, of nearby Rock River. “I wouldn’t have expected them to do
that. I never would expect another human to do that.”
Henderson and Ms. Pasley live
in a rural, windswept trailer park amid weeds, engine parts, fishing tackle,
and barking dogs. A neighbor, John Gillham, 21, said the couple generally
kept to themselves.
About a thousand people attended
a candlelight vigil Sunday night near the University of Wyoming campus
to show their support for Shepard.
“We are saddened, heartsick,”
said the university’s president, Philip Dubois. “All of us I would imagine
are haunted by the thought of a terribly battered young man with his future
erased.
“It is almost as sad to see
individuals and groups around this country react to this event by stereotyping
an entire community, if not an entire state.”
Parents Supportive
of Community
Shepard’s parents said in a statement released before
his death that he would “emphasize he does not want the horrible actions
of a few very disturbed individuals to mar the fine reputations of Laramie
or the university.”
Shepard left Wyoming as a teen
to finish high school in Switzerland. A friend said he had to overcome
concerns about how his sexual orientation would be accepted before he returned
to Wyoming—which is nicknamed the Equality State—for college.
“He had a lot of the same fears
other people have coming into a small community,” said Walt Boulden, a
graduate student. “When he left Wyoming he had just started dealing with
being gay. So he was very concerned about the attitudes when he first came
back.
“But he really felt at home
and comfortable here. He felt this was the place to be right now.
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