Home » The Blog » News » Latest News » 2007 » US Senate Passes Matthew Shepard Act
US Senate Passes Matthew Shepard Act
Posted on: October 1st, 2007 by History Month

>On 27 September, the US Senate voted 60 to 39 in favour of expanding Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act to include protection for LGBT People against hate crimes. The Matthew Shepard Act, named for a victim of homophobia, comes as an amendment to the 2008 Department of Defense authorization bill.

George Bush might still oppose his veto to the new law as he deams hate crime legislation for the LGBT community unnecessary, despite FBI estimates that sexual orientation bias motivated 14% of hate crimes in 2005.

* Senate Extends Protections to Gays, Lesbians in Hate Crimes Act – ABC News
* US Senate passes gay hate crimes law – PinkNews.co.uk
* Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007 – Wikipedia
* Matthew Shepard – Wikipedia

SEARCH THIS SITE & SCHOOLS OUT
  • Categories
  • RECENT ADDITIONS
    ukraine 2 This is how Pride Activists were treated in the Ukraine This happened in Europe in 2012. Following the unexpected last minute abandonment of Pride Kiev, Pride Solidarity invite you...
    Turing E-Petition Calls for Turing Pardon Following a C4 drama-doc on the circumstances of the death of the great twentieth century mathematician Alan Turing –...
    Ravi Ravi Sentenced After all the brou-ha-ha and the rumours of a decade of detention and deportation; the rejection of the plea-bargaining...
    Kiev Kiev Pride Called off at Last Minute Pride Kiev, the Ukraine’s first pride festival, was called off just before it was due to start on the...
    LGBT COMMUNITY EVENTS

    LGBT History Month Patrons:
    John Amaechi, former international basketball player, broadcaster and psychologist, Christine Burns, Equality and diversity specialist, podcaster, campaigner, Dr Harry Cocks, social historian and writer, Angela Eagle MP Work and Pensions, Professor Viv Gardner, Martin Harris Centre for Music and Drama, Professor Martin Hall, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Salford University, Sir Ian McKellen, actor, Cyril Nri, actor, director and writer, Ian Rivers, Professor of Human Development; Subject Leader for Sports Sciences, Brunel University, Professor Sheila Rowbotham, lecturer and campaigner, Labi Siffre, poet, songwriter and singer, Professor Melanie Tebbutt, Director, Manchester Centre for Regional History, Senior Lecturer, Manchester Metropolitan University, Gareth Thomas, rugby international, Jeffrey Weeks, historian, sociologist, author and LGBT activist, Stephen Whittle OBE, Professor of Equalities Law in the School of Law at Manchester Metropolitan University