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Showing posts with label Nadine Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nadine Smith. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Update: Fired city manager applies for new job

This is an update on the issue that lead to the arrest of Nadine Smith for handing out fliers at a meeting of the Largo City Commission. Nadine was there in support of Steve Stanton who, following 14 years of generally excellent evaluations, was fired from his $140,000-a-year job as city manager for announcing his plans to become Susan Stanton.

Susan Stanton has now applied for a new job as city manager in Sarasota, Florida.

The Associated Press reports:
Stanton went to a job interview in a white skirt, makeup and pumps, hoping to get hired to lead this more cosmopolitan tourist town.

The city commissioners who interviewed the job candidate hesitated to bring up the one topic on nearly everyone's mind -- Stanton's plans to undergo sex change surgery someday soon and complete the process started when Stanton recently began living as a woman.

So Stanton brought it up.

Stanton, 48, said that having a transsexual city manager would not be as disruptive as they might think. She said that the recuperation time for a sex change operation is minimal and that she would soon step back from the national spotlight.

"It's a legitimate concern and hopefully I've addressed it," Stanton said after the interview. "I have taken the initiative to throw it out and maybe remove it from the table."

The commissioners were expected to vote Wednesday afternoon on whether to hire Stanton or one of four other candidates.
Stanton is clearly capable of doing the job, and maybe the more "cosmopolitan tourist town" will recognize this. Hopefully the Sarasota City Commissioners will put bigotry aside and give Susan Stanton a fair review as they consider who to hire.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Charges Dropped Against Nadine Smith

from Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida

On Feb 27 Largo police violently arrested Equality Florida's Executive Director during a Largo City Council hearing to fire the City Manager because he is transgender. This week, the State Attorney's office dropped all charges stating:

"The state attorney, having taken testimony under oath at a state attorney investigation, concludes that the facts and circumstances revealed do not warrant prosecution at this time."
At the guidance of my attorney, I have declined to speak out until now about my arrest and brutal treatment by Largo police and the utterly false statements included in the police reports. I have certainly wanted to talk. It is very difficult to remain silent in the face of injustice, and now that these outrageous charges have been dropped, I think it is very important to speak.

But first I want to express the extraordinary gratitude I feel to the people throughout this community, this state and across the country who have written letters of support and sent words of encouragement. I am thankful to the ACLU for providing legal counsel and to the many witnesses who stepped forward to describe the violent actions of the Largo police and refute their fabricated justification for the arrest.

I know that others who have been wrongly arrested under similar circumstances and treated even more brutally do not always have access to dedicated attorneys or the broad support of a community rallying behind them.

Friends in law enforcement tell me this happens all the time. An officer loses his temper, begins an unjustified arrest and then adds a false "resisting with violence" felony charge to cover their actions. The costs to the individual treated this way are outrageous: physical injury, emotional distress, a public assault on their character, the possibility of being sentenced to 5 years in prison, loss of their right to vote, and exorbitant costs for legal representation. Without the ACLU, I would have mortgaged my home to pay the cost of fighting these charges all the way.

When the charges are dropped, the victim is supposed to be so bathed in relief and eager to put a painful chapter behind them that there are no consequences for the officer who has abused his authority.

So let me say now that I believe this was an ugly act intended to intimidate people exercising our first amendment rights by an officer who disagreed with our message. How else to explain the rage and the violence of the arrest? Within moments of handing a piece of paper with the words "Don't Discriminate" to a person who asked me for it, I was grabbed, my wrists and arms twisted to near breaking behind my back. I was shoved down a hallway, banged against a wall and slammed to the ground.

I believe the people at the hearing who followed the police as they took me away and the photographer who snapped a picture of four officers kneeling on me as I was pinned to the ground may have saved me from greater harm.

I am proud that Equality Florida members and community supporters did not bow to intimidation nor respond in kind to the ugliness shown by Largo police at the first meeting. We showed up in even greater numbers at the second hearing and held firm to a commitment to non-violent social change and to speaking up when discrimination and bigotry show themselves in our midst.

I attended and spoke at that second hearing and the atmosphere was different. The officer who arrested me and the others who slammed me around were nowhere to be seen. In their place were fire marshals and police officers who dealt respectfully with those gathered.

The rules where posted at every doorway and when a student was asked not to hold a sign in the council chambers and asked "Why?" an officer briefly explained the policy.

I do not expect police to be perfect, unfailingly polite or without emotion. I know there are dangers and tough judgment calls law enforcement officers face constantly. But when you wear a badge and carry a gun and have the power to use physical force and to take away an individuals freedom, you must be held to a standard that does not allow that extraordinary power to become license to abuse. You may not use that authority to silence dissent or to bully those whose opinions are not your own.

At moments like these police departments habitually close ranks and blindly back an officer no matter how wrong. But there is another way. Los Angeles police appear to be dealing seriously with the apparent misconduct caught on video of officers beating and taunting peaceful demonstrators.

Largo police should throw out the cliched responses. They owe the community the level of professionalism they displayed during the second hearing, not the arrogance and brutality shown at the first one. A public apology is a good way to start.
Sincerely,
Nadine Smith
Executive Director