Sunday, July 15, 2012

3 sentenced in attack on gay man


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
It was a violent attack caught on videotape and posted online for those across the country to see: Four men shouting anti-gay slurs as they beat another man outside a southwest Atlanta convenience store.
Friday, three of the four men accused in the February beating of Brandon White apologized before they were sentenced to 10 years — five years behind bars followed by five years of probation.
"Y'all are the ultimate bullies, and you bullied somebody and you hurt him," Fulton County Superior Court Judge Jackson Bedford told the defendants. "To me there is no question you did it because of his sexual orientation."
With White looking on in the courtroom, the three defendants offered apologies for their actions.
"I am disappointed in myself because I know better and know right from wrong," Dareal Demare Williams said.
Upon their release from prison, probation will include intensive community service and sensitivity education, Jay Abt, an attorney for one of the defendants, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Abt represents defendant Dorian Moragne. Co-defendants Williams and Christopher Cain got the same sentences.
"I think it was a reasonable sentence under the circumstances," Abt said.
A fourth suspect, Javaris Bradford, 24, who allegedly taped the beating, remains at large.
The attack on 20-year-old White angered the city's gay and lesbian community, but those same activists sought lighter sentences in the case, Abt said.
"There were a lot of people of the LGBT community that wrote letters in support of leaner sentences," Abt said.
He said their interest in seeking a lighter sentence was a desire for "restorative justice," that they were more interested in education about gay rights than in incarceration for the offenders.
White was attacked in front of a corner market at 1029 McDaniel St. in the southwest Atlanta neighborhood of Pittsburgh. White was not seriously injured.
Video footage of the attack came to the attention of police and the FBI when it was posted online, and it led to the arrest of three of those involved. Some believed that those responsible for the beating were the ones who posted the video.
In the days following the attack, White spoke publicly alongside neighborhood leaders.
"At first I was embarrassed," White said Feb. 8. "But if they are willing to put it out there, I'm going to face it. I shouldn't have to look over my shoulder just because I'm gay."

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