Английская Википедия:History of LGBT in policing

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The presence of LGBTQ officers in law enforcement has a history of controversy. As times have changed, police forces have adapted by adding LGBTQ divisions, officers and committees within their ranks to account for legislation established by governments to protect individuals who previously had little or no voice when it came to laws impacting their own communities.

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Introduction

Diversity and inclusion in policing

Diversity in service and the elimination of discrimination across the planet is led by many individuals, staff, associations and others within the global police community.

Inclusivity, evolution, acceptance, intersectionality, organizational values and career advancement lead to proud cops and growing acceptance.[1]

Nevertheless, many LGBTQ individuals still face significant discrimination in the police force. In a 2013 study of British forces, Jones and Williams found that almost 20% of sexual minority officers said they experienced discrimination. At the same time, only 25% of those individuals reported the incident to a supervisor.[2]

The following is a timeline of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) police history.

1970s

1974

U.S.

  • Alameda County (California) Sheriff's office begins recruiting gay officers, in the face of gay crime victims in San Francisco having reluctance to report the crimes against them.[3]

1978

U.S.

  • New York City mayor Ed Koch bans discrimination in police hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. This meets with resistance from the city's Patrolmen's Benevolent Association.[4]
  • San Francisco becomes the first city in America to have a recruitment drive for gay police officers, bringing in over 350 applications.[3]

1979

U.S.

  • Washington DC approves an officer (Bonnie Davenport) who received sex reassignment surgery the previous year to return to active duty as a woman. She continued to serve the police force as a woman for 12 additional years of service.[5]

1980s

1981

U.S.

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1982

U.S.

  • New York City police sergeant Charles H. Cochrane Jr. and former Fairview, New Jersey sergeant Sam Ciccone form the first group targeted at the needs of gay members of law enforcement, the Gay Officers Action League (GOAL).[4]

1985

U.S.

  • The Golden State Peace Officers Association, "an organization of gay police officers, sheriff's deputies, California Highway Patrol officers and other homosexual law enforcement personnel", was started in 1985 and is thought to have been formed as an informal group of officers who "got together after work to drink beer and discuss the frustrations of police work. In a Spokane, Washington news article from 1987, a reporter claims the group was unofficially called "Pigs In Paradise".[7]

1990s

1990

United Kingdom

  • Gay Police Association (GPA) founded by Constable James Bradley from the Metropolitan Police Service plus four other officers to represent the interests and needs of gay and bisexual police and staff in the United Kingdom.

1991

Canada

  • The death of Alain Brosseau inspired the creation of a combined effort of LGBT activists and Ottawa police and formed the GLBT Ottawa Police Liaison Committee. It included sensitivity training for police officers, as many of the LGBT activists noted the hatred and intolerance for the gay community that was held by members of the RCMP and Ottawa city police. The "diversity training" was a three-hour session that was held for all 600 members of the Ottawa city police service.[8]

U.S.

  • The Lesbian and Gay Police Association was initially a group of four Chicago police officers who founded the organization to support gay and closeted police officers at that time. "The LGPA is dedicated to promoting solidarity and upholding Human Rights, providing support and social interaction for its members and to promote understanding between the police and the LGBT Communities through education, communication and charitable acts."[9]

1993

Canada

  • Some sources say the country's first hate crimes unit was created in Ottawa while other sources claim it never existed and is rather the "security and intelligence service" misinterpreted as the hate crime unit. However the security and intelligence service does investigate hate crimes.[10]

1995

U.S.

  • The first float on the 1995 GLBT parade in Chicago was the GOAL-Illinois float.

2000s

2001

France

  • Flag !Creation of an association of LGBT police officers in France

2003

United Kingdom

  • London's Metropolitan Police allows 35 uniformed officers to participate Pride in London, the first time that police officers where allowed to wear uniforms while participating in Pride in London. [11]

2004

European Union

2009

Peru

  • Peru announces a nationwide ban on police officers who have same-gender sexual relations, stating that they caused harm to the image of the police force.[13]

2010s

2014

United Kingdom

2015

United Kingdom

United States

  • Two gay police officers become the first partnered couple to graduate from the Boston Police Academy together. At the time of their graduation, it was believed that the couple may have been the first openly gay couple in any major police department in the U.S.[15]

2016

Canada

  • A gay Toronto police officer sends an open letter to organizers of Pride Toronto regarding political action by Black Lives Matter in 2016's parade that demanded the organizers exclude Toronto Police Service uniformed officers and police vehicles from participating in future parade festivities.[16]

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  • Police in Toronto establish the Youth Justice Bursary Fund headed by an LGBTQ Liaison officer who provides community policing support to Toronto Police Service LGBTQ members and community members.

Chile

  • Chile's Hugo Alcalde becomes that country's first gay police officer to have a civil union.[17]

Netherlands

  • The 1st annual World LGBT Conference for Criminal Justice Professionals[18] was held in August of this year with the theme of "To Connect And Inspire".

United States

  • Among those injured in a Dallas, Texas sniper attack in July 2016 was a Dallas Area Rapid Transit officer. He and his former husband - himself a DART officer - worked with "Resource Center, a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender organization —  to get same-sex partner benefits for DART a few years earlier".[19]

2020s

2021

United Kingdom

Historical associations

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:LGBT history