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NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003

Criminalizing sexuality

The question of how the sexuality of criminal defendants is presented to juries and handled by judges was explored at a conference in late February at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago. Joey Mogul, a lawyer with the People's Law Office, cited the discretion given to prosecutors in seeking the death penalty as a problem.

During the conviction phase of a trial, gender stereotypes can be used to cast a convicted person as belonging to a gender variance, Mogul said. This may present the convict as being inferior and having a tendency to violence. It is a quick process to dehumanize the defendant. The dykier and butchier, the better, said Mogul. Thus, a jury may view the convicted person as more worthy of death, or whatever punishment the prosecutor seeks.

Even if defendants are "straight," the prosecutor may, through insinuation and innuendo, cast them as queer in order to influence a biased jury. Forty percent of women in prison have had accusations of being lesbian used against them. Mogul advocates a law that forbids the mention of gender orientation in trials.

She cited a 1999 case where the prosecution bombarded the jury with evidence of the defendant’s lesbianism. The states attorney argued that because she was a "hard core" lesbian, she was more likely to kill. The allegations were completely unsubstantiated and irrelevant. Mogul said she was amazed at how the state kept repeating this non-evidence and wryly observed that she has never heard of a prosecutor using heterosexuality as a motive for murder.

The innocent and heterosexual Kerry Max Cook (portrayed in the drama "Exonerated") was condemned partly on the basis of his alleged homosexuality. The news of his being gay preceded him to prison where he was unmercifully treated by the inmates.

Lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgendered people have no peers on the jury. Thus, Mogul argued, the jury of peers is simply a mockery if the sexuality of the defendant is to be a factor is the prosecution's case.

--January

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