Matthew Shepard's ghost.

AuthorKrayewski, Ed
PositionFollow-Up

The 1998 murder of 21-year-old Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyoming, was a flashpoint for advocates of hate crime laws. In the days between his brutal beating and his death, Shepard's friends promoted the idea that he was attacked because he was gay. Shepard's murderers, Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson, reinforced that belief when they offered a "gay panic" defense, claiming they had been driven temporarily insane when Shepard came on to them. The framing stuck: The hate crime statute that Congress passed in 2009 was named after Shepard.

The "hate" label was applied not just to the killing but to the place where the crime happened. In "The 'Hate State' Myth" (May 1999), Robert O. Blanchard, a gay Wyoming native, complained to reason readers that the press had portrayed his home state as an ignorant, bigoted backwater. "The national media," one local told him, "will get 100 interviews and, if they get one like 'gays get what they deserve,' they will use it." The two trends frequently converged, with stories about the Shepard case often emphasizing that Wyoming did not have a hate crime law.

Now Stephen Jimenez, another gay journalist, is claiming that Shepard's death was fueled not by hate but by drugs. In The Book of Matt: Hidden Truths...

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