Thanks to the numerous Blenders who sent tips in about this incident. Click over to the Voice to see the photos. "That is a lie, and I am appalled by it.Ī rally was held yesterday at the Tarrant County Courthouse. "The groping of the police officer - really? We're gay, but we're not dumb," Schrock said to the crowd that gathered at the bar Sunday afternoon. Schrock said claims that patrons made sexual advances to the officers and that one patron groped an officer were lies.
And about those sexual gestures and provocations? The statement said that while some officers were outside dealing with the vomiting suspect, another officer inside requested assistance in handling an intoxicated patron who was resisting arrest, and that this person was "placed on the ground to control and apprehend him."Įyewitnesses, not surprisingly, viewed that interpretation of events quite differently, saying Gibson weighed "maybe 160 pounds soaking wet" and didn't resist, but stumbled when one officer grabbed him by the arm. That man was escorted outside and arrested for public intoxication, but was released to paramedics because of his "extreme intoxication" and the fact that he was vomiting repeatedly. A second "intoxicated individual" was arrested for public intoxication after making "sexually explicit movements towards another officer," and a third person assaulted a TABC agent by grabbing his groin. The statement also said that "an extremely intoxicated patron made sexually explicit movements toward the police supervisor" and that person was arrested for public intoxication.
And what does the police department have to say about this incident? She said they only arrested men and seemed to be targeting effeminate men.Īnother patron, Chad Gibson, was slammed to the floor by the cops and his sister reported to the Voice that he was hospitalized and has bleeding in his brain. She told him she had been drinking but that she had a designated driver. She asked why they were there and he said a disgruntled employee had said that the bar was overserving people. I know Dallas would not put up with this.I am still so shocked it is 2009 and this just happened.Īn eyewitness said that she was initially pleased to see the police, thinking they were there to protect patrons since the bar was in a rough part of town. I just moved to Fort Worth from Dallas, so this is such a shock to me. The worst part is that had numerous people face down on the ground outside. And just so you know, it wasn't fire hazard crowded or seedy wild in there. I the bar and they a big van in the parking lot and numerous cars on the street. I left shortly after and as I walked through the front bar there were numerous cops with plastic handcuffs all ready to go. When one group started up their conversations again, they took one guy away. came through with flashlights, being loud asking what was going on out here, then asked why everyone was all the sudden being quiet. My group and I were sitting on the back patio at a picnic table. The not awesome thing was the paddy wagon of homophobic police that showed up. That evening the Fort Worth Police decided to pay a visit and re-enact good-old-fashioned "law enforcement." Camp told the local LGBT news outlet The Dallas Voice about the incident: Photo of police pinning a patron to the ground. Is this what the police in Fort Worth, TX call "Stonewall Commemoration"? A gay club called the Rainbow Lounge opened in the city and Todd Camp, the founder of Q Cinema and former reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, was celebrating his birthday at the club and two Stonewall docs were being screened.