Advertisement
Most Read Articles
>> Opinion: Don’t vote for Atlanta City Councilmember Alex Wan just because he’s gay>> Gay-owned bar in East Atlanta cited for serving booze after hours
>> Cheerios vs. haters — with a lesbian twist
>> Southern Baptists approve resolution against accepting gay Boy Scouts
>> Atlanta Silverbacks announce support for gay sports org, plan first LGBT fan night
Advertisement
LGBT Blogroll
-
Obama Nominates Three More Gay Ambassadors
Queerty | 18 Jun 2013 | 6:05 pm
-
Del. state House approves transgender protections bill
LGBTQ Nation | 18 Jun 2013 | 6:00 pm
-
Bible-Quoting NYC Principal Allegedly Threatened To Blow Up Middle School
Joe. My. God. | 18 Jun 2013 | 4:42 pm
-
Prince at TEDx: Mind the Gap
The Bilerico Project | 18 Jun 2013 | 3:00 pm
-
Melissa Etheridge, Eric Holder, Tammy Baldwin Headline DOJ Gay Pride Event
On Top Magazine Headlines | 18 Jun 2013 | 11:31 am
Advertisement
| 'Raid of the Rainbow Lounge' explores Texas gay bar controversy |
| by Dyana Bagby | ||||||
| October 01, 2012 13:32 | ||||||
|
When police raided a Fort Worth, Texas, gay bar on June 28, 2009, it was just the beginning of angry City Council meetings, protests and rallies — and, eventually, healing and change. “Raid of the Rainbow Lounge,” a documentary that chronicles what happened in Forth Worth following the police raid, premieres in Atlanta on Oct. 7 as part of Out on Film. Director Robert Camina said he looks forward to bringing his film to Atlanta because of the similarities he sees in Texas raid and the one at the Atlanta Eagle, just 10 weeks later. Camina and Atlanta Eagle attorney Dan Grossman will join a panel discussion after the film.
“I’m very excited to come to Atlanta because of the kinship of Fort Worth and Atlanta. There are so many parallels,” Camina says. “I’m really anxious to see the audience reaction and questions posed. If any audience can relate, it’s the Atlanta audience.” The Atlanta Police Department’s raid on the Atlanta Eagle led to several lawsuits by gay bar patrons and employees which the city of Atlanta eventually settled for more than $1.5 million. An independent investigation into the September 10, 2009, raid cost taxpayers another $1.2 million, for a total of nearly $3 million Atlanta paid out. The final case against the city, filed by bartender Chris Lopez, was dismissed by a federal judge in May. The lawsuits forced the APD to make changes to its standard operating procedures including more training on LGBT diversity. But years later, some in Atlanta’s LGBT communities continue to harbor ill feelings for the city police department and Mayor Kasim Reed. In Texas, activists held rallies and were thrown out of City Council meetings because they shouted angrily at city officials, yet eventually the city and LGBT residents came together to build bridges. The police chief even became an open and vocal LGBT advocate. “In the wake of the raid ...this horrible incident ... the city and police department instituted diversity training, assigned an LGBT liaison to the police department, added gender identity to its nondiscrimination statement and gave benefits to domestic partners,” Camina says. “It was a catalyst for a lot of change.” Camina started out to make a short film to be used as an educational tool with police departments, schools, attorneys general offices. Now a feature-length film, his documentary is screened at film festivals but also is screened on college campuses and at various law enforcement agencies.
Top photo: Rallies protesting the raid on the Rainbow Lounge helped lead to change in Fort Worth’s leadership on LGBT issues. (Publicity photo)
|










