A man who was assaulted by a crew of toughs
outside a local East Baltimore liquor store claims he was attacked because of
his orientation.
Shaw,
a 30-year-old gay man, had made a quick run to the liquor store at the
intersection of East Hoffman and North Rose streets around 9 p.m Monday
evening.
After
purchasing medication, Shaw briefly talked with the clerk before heading back
home. Shortly after leaving, he was unexpectedly punched from behind and the
vicious attack began. Four others quickly joined in.
“I was pinned down by
punches,” Shaw said. “It was so hard that I felt my lip and side face swell up
immediately. I was trying to talk to these guys, but they weren’t letting me
talk.”
Eventually,
someone from the store came outside to see what was happening and Shaw’s
attackers fled. Still conscious and in extensive pain, Shaw managed to make it
inside his home, where he called his mother.
“I can’t even describe that
moment for me. I thought my world was ending,” Sheila Shaw told The
Baltimore Sun. “No parent wants to get that phone call. The tone of his voice
… I thought, ‘He’s strong enough to make the phone call, but I’m probably going
to lose my son.’”
Shaw
suffered a bloodied and swollen face and head; his knees and elbows were
scraped. Fortunately, doctors at John Hopkins Hospital told him that nothing
was fractured in the attack. And by yesterday, Shaw’s swelling had decreased by
50 percent. But in a neighborhood where he’s heard comments from other men
about “faggots on the block,” and where he stands out as a 6-foot man with dyed
blonde hair and a career path as a hairstylist, Shaw maintains that homophobia
lead to the attack.
“This needs to be spoken to
because somebody needs to take a stand,” he said. “Hate crimes happen every
day.”
Investigators
have yet to determine if this was a hate crime; however, Baltimore Police
spokesman Jeremy Silbert said that if suspects are identified and apprehended,
officers will talk with the state attorney’s office to see if Shaw’s beating
was biased in nature.
Until
then, Shaw says he has received encouragement for speaking up.
“I’m glad I could share my
story and people could empathize with the story, because I’m getting a lot of
feedback from people who have been through it or who have had family members
who have been through it,” he said. “I’m glad I could be a spokesman, because a
lot of people don’t make it through situations like this.”
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If
a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have
committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death; their blood
[shall be] upon them.
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And
turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrha into ashes condemned [them] with an
overthrow, making [them] an ensample unto those that after should live
ungodly;
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Look like Sisqo!
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