Salt Lake City Prosecutor Drops Charges Against Gay Couple

July 31, 2009

As we mentioned here on July 15th, a gay couple was detained and roughed up by Mormon Church Security Guards for kissing on the church-owned Main Street Plaza in downtown Salt Lake City.

The Plaza quite literally used to be one block of Main Street, but the city sold it to the church over a decade ago, and the church turned Main Street into a pedestrian walkway.

Matt Aune and Derek Jones were walking home early in July when they stopped to hug and exchange what they describe as a peck on the cheek on the Main Street Plaza.  Church security guards confronted the men and accused them of inappropriate behavior.

Derek Jones and Matt Aune, pictured in The Salt Lake Tribune

Derek Jones and Matt Aune, pictured in The Salt Lake Tribune

When the men didn’t immediately leave, and confronted the security guards on their double standard (straight couples are often seen kissing and being physically intimate on the Main Street Plaza), the security guards forcibly separated the men, forced Derek to the ground and physically detained them while waiting for Salt Lake City Police to arrive at the scene.

Police cited the men for “trespassing.”  On Wednesday, Salt Lake City Prosecutor Sim Gill dropped the charges against Jones and Aune.  “The two individuals believed — albeit mistakenly — that they had the right to be there,” Gill is quoted as saying in The Salt Lake Tribune. “Fairness requires that either that property be not open to the public or you condition that [openness] in a way that the person who comes on understands that it is private property.”+

The Salt Lake Tribune editorialized in favor of the prosecutor’s decision.

The Mormon Church released video surveillance showing their own security guards forcibly detaining the gay men to the city prosecutor, and The Salt Lake Tribune obtained and posted that video through an open records request.

As for Aune and Jones, they, along with their attorneys, held a press conference held after the charges against them had been dropped.  “We never thought we were doing anything wrong,” Aune said Wednesday. “We’re glad the city agreed with us.”

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A Kiss Is Just A Kiss, Mr. Hannity…

February 26, 2009

The other night, Fox’s Sean Hannity had this to say about the Oscars:

“…they keep showing the scenes of men kissing. And I’m thinking do we have to expose our children to more and more sex, more and more violence, you know, more and more controversy?”


He continued:

Listen, I’m just more sensitive. If it’s going to be a family event, you know, and you want to — you can’t watch a lot of programs now because of the adult content. We’re robbing these kids, Alicia, of their childhood. We’re over-sexualizing them at younger and younger ages.” 

Though there were 14 straight kisses and just 3 gay kisses (all the same couple and all scenes from Milk, btw) aired during the Oscars, even kids know that a kiss is just a kiss.

Isn’t it time Sean Hannity figured that out too?

Full Transcript Below:

HANNITY: We continue now with our “Great American Panel.”

All right. The single most dull and boring and the self-righteous pat each other on the back, you know, actors and actresses. Here’s Sean Penn last night, the really big genius that he is. Here he is.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SEAN PENN, ACTOR: For those who saw the signs of hatred as our cars drove in tonight, and I think that it is a good time for those who voted for the ban against gay marriage to sit and reflect and anticipate their great shame and the shame in their grandchildren’s eyes if they continue that way of support. We’ve got to have equal rights for everyone.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

DIETL: All I can say is I wore my pink tie tonight in support of Mr. Penn. I don’t think so. This is not a political event. He’s a great actor. He’s got the Academy Award twice. But he’s sucking face with pineapple face and with Fidel. What reasons? You can’t be gay…

HANNITY: He’s talking about Hugo Chavez.

DIETL: Yes, you can’t be gay and live in Venezuela. You can’t be gay and live in Cuba. They have no human rights there, so Mr. Penn, why don’t you go over and tell them to give some human rights to people over there?

HANNITY: That’s a great point. Why doesn’t he do that?

MENENDEZ: He lives in America, he’s an American…

DIETL: He hates America. He hates America.

(CROSSTALK)

HANNITY: He hangs out with dictators. That’s Bo’s point.

MENENDEZ: That’s not what we’re talking about, though. We’re talking about the fact that, as I was driving in there who were — who were people flashing these messages of hate and…

HANNITY: Hang on one second. Hang on one second. Bo’s point is just the opposite. He’s hanging out with dictators where, if you’re gay, you’re going to be persecuted. And so he’s hypocritical.

DIETL: Right. Why are you sucking face with them for?

MENENDEZ: Right. To be honest, I do not know that that is what he’s doing, but in spite of that, I think the speech he made was eloquent and it was to the point.

HANNITY: All right, let me ask you.

EHRLICH: It’s all about politics, Sean. You know that. It’s all about politics.

MENENDEZ: It was a political film.

DIETL: Not too many votes, people who were viewing this.

EHRLICH: Sean’s point is, it’s just wildly inconsistent. He’s not consistent.

HANNITY: And let me ask — my wife said to me, and I wasn’t watching, because I was busy prepping for this show. But she said, you know, they keep showing the scenes of men kissing. And I’m thinking do we have to expose our children to more and more sex, more and more violence, you know, more and more controversy? Does that bother you at all?

EHRLICH: My kid’s asleep, but the point is, of course, it’s an agenda, and they don’t care. Look, these are adult subjects, but they’re not for my 9-year-old. This is not a discussion I need to have with my 9- year-old.

MENENDEZ: Do you get upset when you see heterosexual couples doing the same thing on TV?

DIETL: No, I don’t get upset when I see two people in love and kissing each other, but I get upset when a guy is sticking his tongue in another guy’s mouth. Maybe he wants that, but don’t bring that to my children at that age to show it’s an acceptable thing in daylight.

EHRLICH: And I agree. If it’s homosexual or heterosexual, I don’t want my 9-year-old…

DIETL: I’m not against lesbianics [SIC]. I’m not against gays.

HANNITY: What was that?

DIETL: Lesbianics [SIC]. I’m not against them, Sean. Whatever you want to suck on, that’s fine. But my point is — my point is, Sean, but don’t bring it in front of my children while they’re…

(CROSSTALK)

HANNITY: Listen, I’m just more sensitive. If it’s going to be a family event, you know, and you want to — you can’t watch a lot of programs now because of the adult content. We’re robbing these kids, Alicia, of their childhood. We’re over-sexualizing them at younger and younger ages. We’re teaching them how to put condoms on cucumbers and on bananas. And you know what? Why don’t we leave the kids alone a little bit? Have some consideration for them?

MENENDEZ: I have even bigger problems with the amount of violence we show on television.

(CROSSTALK)

HANNITY: Sex and violence.

MENENDEZ: If we’re talking about hypocrisy, then let’s talk about a different standard…

DIETL: Look at the movie that Woody Allen made. This one about Barcelona. He had two gals that went there. One was engaged to be married. The next thing, this guy Javay (ph) — he was up for the Academy Award. Javier. Javier. He’s there, he’s — taking this one, this one, that one. And this is the realm of people’s mind.

This woman was happily engaged. She made some — groping (ph) with him. Then all of the sudden the one that won the Academy Award, she’s in it. She’s jumping in. I mean, this is what Hollywood’s all about, showing people, don’t be true to your loved one. Bounce around.

And you want to know something? Kids get affected by this…

HANNITY: They do.

DIETL: … when they think no one can be sincere.

EHRLICH: And there’s a difference between cartoon violence, like it didn’t impact anybody, and real violence. I don’t want my 9-year-old seeing real adult violence either, and that’s the parents’ job. I’m just tired of Hollywood, their agenda. Unfortunately, the agenda are not fair (ph) today.

HANNITY: I don’t want lectures from Penn or Baldwin or any of these guys.

DIETL: He’s an actor. He’s a great actor.

MENENDEZ: It’s his moment. Let him have his moment.

HANNITY: He’s not that great of an actor. Denzel Washington is a great actor.

DIETL: He’s a friend of mine. I love him. He’s great.

HANNITY: Morgan Freeman is a great actor.

DIETL: He was with me on the — at the table for New Year’s Eve.

HANNITY: All right. We’ve got to run. Good to see you all. Thank you.

DIETL: Good man.

HANNITY: And coming up Obama says that he’s aiming to cut the deficit in half. Well, I guess that means that the tax cuts he promised for 95 percent of Americans are being left on the campaign trail, along with some of his other promises. Dick Morris next. He’ll break it all down, straight ahead.

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