Thursday, October 26, 2023

‘Bury them in fruit jars.’ A gay mass murder and the cover-up that followed.

Fifty years after the deadly fire at New Orleans' Up Stairs Lounge, new perspectives consider the atrocities that occurred after the blaze.


Flames shot through the crowded Up Stairs Lounge as bartender Buddy Rasmussen opened the front door to see who had been ringing the downstairs buzzer. Someone had lit the popular bar’s stairwell carpet on fire, and it burned its way up the wooden stairs into the bar, quickly igniting the lounge’s red wallpaper, curtains, and posters of Burt Reynolds naked on a bearskin rug and Olympic swimmer Mark Spitz wearing his seven gold medals, a star-spangled Speedo, and a smile.

Some patrons saw the blaze and ran for the nearest exits or down the stairwell, emerging with their clothes on fire as neighbors raced to pour pitchers of water onto them. Rasmussen began tapping patrons on the shoulder to follow him toward the fire exit at the back of the bar, but many were too shocked by the exploding blaze to move.

The June 24, 1973, conflagration, likely set by a sex worker ejected from the New Orleans bar earlier that night, killed 32 people and injured at least 15 others. 

Yet the reaction to the catastrophe hardly matched the immense suffering the fire caused, and the tragedy was compounded by multiple denials: Public officials refused to issue statements about the fire, and Catholic churches refused to hold funeral services for the victims, whom they saw as unrepentant sinners. The media only reported on the fire briefly or not at all, and some families refused to claim their relatives’ bodies because they didn’t want to acknowledge that they were gay. Three of the victims ended up buried in unmarked graves — two remain unidentified.

To this day, the arson remains unsolved.

Hate crimes reverberate through communities, intimidating an entire class of people. The Up Stairs Lounge had been a safe space in the gay-friendly, tourist-heavy French Quarter. But as bar patrons feared a similar attack on other gathering spots, still others worried that police might start raiding gay bars more often and arresting more men in the name of public safety. Bar owners believed talking too much about the fire could hurt business. And locals just wanted to move on from the horror.

As a result, to this day, even many queer New Orleanians aren’t aware of the most devastating fire in their city’s history, the deadliest massacre of gay men in the U.S. before the June 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida. 

This year, half a century later, there’s considerable important work being done to ensure that the arson and its aftermath are remembered and the deaths memorialized. For the tragedy’s anniversary, a group of community activists, religious leaders, and queer historians partnered with the LGBT+ Archives Project of Louisiana and the Historic New Orleans Collection to organize a weekend of commemorative events at the end of June. 

The weekend, attended by LGBTQ Nation, featured discussions with religious leaders and activists who lent a hand in the fire’s aftermath, artists who have made documentaries and theatrical works based on the event, church leaders concerned with the tragedy’s spiritual legacy, and podcasters and archivists dedicated to preserving its terrible memory. The weekend events also included art exhibitions, film screenings, a memorial service, and a “second line” jazz funeral through the city’s streets to the now defunct bar’s front entrance.

Their work is especially important considering the current backlash against remembering the atrocities America has committed against its most vulnerable communities. Extreme right-wingers are busy denying our guilt over slavery, the genocide of Native Americans, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and the effect these traumas have on minority communities to this day.

But those committed to preserving history aren’t just making artworks and public speeches about the tragedy; they’re also working to ensure that the victims and their families finally get the recognition and empathy they deserve for their loss.

The fire occurred when New Orleans author Johnny Townsend was only 11 years old. Though he saw horrific photos of the aftermath on TV news at the time, as he grew up, he could find little background on what happened. So in 1989 — 16 years after the fire — he began tracking down the bar’s survivors and former patrons with the help of Rasmussen, the lounge’s surviving bartender.

Through interviews and research, Townsend published the first historical account of what happened as well as profiles for each victim in his 2011 book Let the Faggots Burn. The amateur historian struggled to find a publisher, so he eventually published it himself via BookLocker.com. After the 333-page book was released, a son of one of the fire’s victims approached him after Townsend spoke publicly about the book and said that all he had ever known of his father was what his mother had told him: “Your father was a drunk, and he died at a bar.” 

Townsend’s book had given his dad back to him. Today, the historical amnesia is finally being addressed. There are three books about the fire — including Clayton Delery-Edwards’ comprehensive 2014 account, The Up Stairs Lounge Arson, and Robert W. Fieseler’s 2018 nonfiction narrative, Tinderbox.

Three documentaries have been made about the arson, with a fourth in production, as well as one play, a stage musical, four unproduced screenplays, a dance piece, various podcasts, and a permanent art installation.

One of the documentaries, a 2013 short by Royd Anderson, helped the estranged family of World War II veteran Ferris LeBlanc realize that he was one of three “unidentified white males” who perished in the blaze. The city buried his corpse in an unmarked plot within Resthaven Memorial Park, a potter’s field located near the city’s northeastern coast.

Anderson is now working on a documentary called Saving Ferris and pressuring government officials to exhume LeBlanc and give him the proper military burial that he deserved.

Max Vernon’s 2017 stage musical, The View UpStairs, depicts a snarky gay fashionista millennial who buys the dilapidated Up Stairs Lounge to launch his flagship store but is then magically transported to 1973, just before the fire. Despite its tragic content, it has been seen by over 100,000 people — Off-Broadway, in multiple U.S. cities, as well as in England and Australia — and has been translated into Japanese and seen by 20,000 theatergoers. Drag legend RuPaul called the musical “fantastic.”

By Daniel Villarreal Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Fraud 101: Scams and how to spot them

There is no shortage of bad actors out there employing a plethora of schemes all with the same object — separating people an their money or valuables.

But there are ways to spot a scam, and steps you can take if you believe you have been a victim or an intended one.

To help spread awareness of fraud and identity theft, Jerry Mitchell from the state attorney general’s office spoke to an audience of more than 60 people on Monday at Old Bedford Village at a seminar sponsored by Community Life, Pennsylvania Link to Aging and Disability Resources, Center for Independent Living and Huntingdon-Bedford-Fulton Area Agency on Aging.

Prevention is the first and most important step to heading off a scam.

According to the Federal Trade Commission, some typical phone scams include:

• You may be a winner — You may be, but if you have to pay to get the prize, it’s not a prize, it’s a scam.

• You are in trouble with the law — The caller may say you will be arrested or fined if you don’t pay a certain tax or debt. The goal is to frighten you into paying, but real law enforcement agencies do not make such threatening calls.

• Act now — Legitimate businesses will give you time to consider their offer. Take your time and don’t give in to pressure.

• Gift cards are a gift … to the scammer — Callers often ask you to pay by wiring money or using a gift card, prepaid card or cash reload card. The purpose is to make it difficult for you to get your money back. Such calls are almost always a scam.

• Don’t give out private information — Agencies such as Social Security or the IRS will not call you for sensitive information.

• You don’t have to take those robocalls— If you are on the national Do Not Call Registry you should not get live sales calls from companies you’ve not done business with in the past; in fact those calls are illegal, and whether it’s a scam or not, probably a hint that it’s someone you don’t want to do business with.

Some other common scams, the FTC warns, include:

• Impersonators — Someone calls, claiming to be with a government agency or even a love interest. They may even have fake names or numbers to fool your caller ID.

• Debt relief scams — The caller will offer to lower your interest rates or get loan forgiven — but only if you pay first.

• Investment scams — Before you invest your money, check out the potential investment with securities regulators.

• Charity scams — Always check out a charity before parting with your money, and don’t feel pressured to give over the phone.

• Extended car warranties — Callers find out what kind of car you drive and offer overpriced or worthless service contracts.

• Free trials — Be sure you can cancel when the “free trial” is up.

• Loan scams — The scammers target people with poor credit histories to guarantee loans or credit cards for an up-front fee. Legitimate lenders don’t work that way, especially if you have poor credit or no credit.

• Travel or timeshare scams — Free or low-cost vacations can cost you a lot of cash, and sometimes you find out there is no vacation.

When you receive a call you’re not comfortable with, the FTC advises these steps:

• Hang up — As noted above, robocalls are illegal if you are on the Do Not Call Registry. Don’t press numbers or speak to anyone, it will just lead to more robocalls.

• Consider call blocking or call labeling.

• Don’t trust your caller ID — Scammers can make any name or number show up on your phone ID.

Scams can take many forms, and sometimes take the form of a new romance. But, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the same rules of caution apply. Some warning signs:

• A new love who lives far away asks you to wire money or share your credit card number;

•Your love interest asks you to sign a document giving them control of your finances or your house;

• Your love asks you to open a joint bank account or co-sign a loan;

• The new flame asks for access to your bank or credit card accounts.