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Young, Gay and Murdered

Kids are coming out younger, but are schools ready to handle the complex issues of identity and sexuality? For Larry King, the question had tragic implications.

 
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Teenage Tragedy

A 15-year-old boy told family and friends he was gay. He dressed flamboyantly; he hit on a classmate. His murder made clear that issues of sexuality, at such a young age, can have heartbreaking consequences.

 
 

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At 15, Lawrence King was small—5 feet 1 inch—but very hard to miss. In January, he started to show up for class at Oxnard, Calif.'s E. O. Green Junior High School decked out in women's accessories. On some days, he would slick up his curly hair in a Prince-like bouffant. Sometimes he'd paint his fingernails hot pink and dab glitter or white foundation on his cheeks. "He wore makeup better than I did," says Marissa Moreno, 13, one of his classmates. He bought a pair of stilettos at Target, and he couldn't have been prouder if he had on a varsity football jersey. He thought nothing of chasing the boys around the school in them, teetering as he ran.

But on the morning of Feb. 12, Larry left his glitter and his heels at home. He came to school dressed like any other boy: tennis shoes, baggy pants, a loose sweater over a collared shirt. He seemed unhappy about something. He hadn't slept much the night before, and he told one school employee that he threw up his breakfast that morning, which he sometimes did because he obsessed over his weight. But this was different. One student noticed that as Larry walked across the quad, he kept looking back nervously over his shoulder before he slipped into his first-period English class. The teacher, Dawn Boldrin, told the students to collect their belongings, and then marched them to a nearby computer lab, so they could type out their papers on World War II. Larry found a seat in the middle of the room. Behind him, Brandon McInerney pulled up a chair.

Brandon, 14, wasn't working on his paper, because he told Mrs. Boldrin he'd finished it. Instead, he opened a history book and started to read. Or at least he pretended to. "He kept looking over at Larry," says a student who was in the class that morning. "He'd look at the book and look at Larry, and look at the book and look at Larry." At 8:30 a.m., a half hour into class, Brandon quietly stood up. Then, without anyone's noticing, he removed a handgun that he had somehow sneaked to school, aimed it at Larry's head, and fired a single shot. Boldrin, who was across the room looking at another student's work, spun around. "Brandon, what the hell are you doing!" she screamed. Brandon fired at Larry a second time, tossed the gun on the ground and calmly walked through the classroom door. Police arrested him within seven minutes, a few blocks from school. Larry was rushed to the hospital, where he died two days later of brain injuries.

The Larry King shooting became the most prominent gay-bias crime since the murder of Matthew Shepard 10 years ago. But despite all the attention and outrage, the reason Larry died isn't as clear-cut as many people think. California's Supreme Court has just legalized gay marriage. There are gay characters on popular TV shows such as "Gossip Girl" and "Ugly Betty," and no one seems to notice. Kids like Larry are so comfortable with the concept of being openly gay that they are coming out younger and younger. One study found that the average age when kids self-identify as gay has tumbled to 13.4; their parents usually find out a year later.

What you might call "the shrinking closet" is arguably a major factor in Larry's death. Even as homosexuality has become more accepted, the prospect of being openly gay in middle school raises a troubling set of issues. Kids may want to express who they are, but they are playing grown-up without fully knowing what that means. At the same time, teachers and parents are often uncomfortable dealing with sexual issues in children so young. Schools are caught in between. How do you protect legitimate, personal expression while preventing inappropriate, sometimes harmful, behavior? Larry King was, admittedly, a problematical test case: he was a troubled child who flaunted his sexuality and wielded it like a weapon—it was often his first line of defense. But his story sheds light on the difficulty of defining the limits of tolerance. As E. O. Green found, finding that balance presents an enormous challenge.

Larry's life was hard from the beginning. His biological mother was a drug user; his father wasn't in the picture. When Greg and Dawn King took him in at age 2, the family was told he wasn't being fed regularly. Early on, a speech impediment made Larry difficult to understand, and he repeated first grade because he had trouble reading. He was a gentle child who loved nature and crocheting, but he also acted out from an early age. "We couldn't take him to the grocery store without him shoplifting," Greg says. "We couldn't get him to clean up his room. We sent him upstairs—he'd get a screwdriver and poke holes in the walls." He was prescribed ADHD medication, and Greg says Larry was diagnosed with reactive attachment disorder, a rare condition in which children never fully bond with their caregivers or parents.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Jeppydog @ 06/07/2009 7:27:07 AM

    How dare anyone blame Ms. Epstein who was a friend to Larry. Also, the school meant well, but swept too many complaints under the rug. You have to listen to students as well as teachers' complaints to bring a problem out in the open. Larry was being catered to too much. He had a right not to be harassed but so did Brandon. Larry should've had to adhere to the dress code and behaviior for his own sake. His father can't blame the school however for allowing Larry to dress that way if he allowed it as well.

  • Posted By: AngelinaKnight @ 05/05/2009 3:46:07 AM

    I am a TG from Washington State. That being said so no one accuses me of Homophobic comments I want to say this. That a school would allow students to feel comfortable and free to be themselves is excellent. No child should be told to pretend they are something they are not. However, If the reports are true of his pursuing taunting and forcefully flirting with the boys in his school are true regardless of who it is Boy, Girl, gay or straight Sexual harassment is sexual harassment and should not, can not, be permitted on school grounds. Just as young GLBT kids should feel safe to be themselves without threat of bodily harm to verbal harassment all children, tweens and teens regardless of gender or sexual identity should feel safe from the unwanted advances of another student.

  • Posted By: foxspirit5 @ 02/19/2009 10:42:24 AM

    Sad.

    This is sad. The world as we know it is crumbling before our very eyes, and everyone is doing nothing but blaming the other! I as a single parent know first-hand that my child is FULLY GAY. And I love him no matter what he does. Why? The world turns their back to what I would call the worst hate crime ever. Little Larry even CHANGED HIS CLOTHES to avoid his tragic downfall. He had admitted his feelings, and been punished far worse then he should have been!

    I also feel that Bradon should be locked up for his actions. If let free...who knows if he may strike again?

    As for his FATHER. I am sickened that he would blame a poor child that was killed by his own SON. Then he had the nerve to blame Larry, when he in the end was the victim of a horrible hate crime. But be not blind my friends. For Larry is not the first to have been killed for being Gay.

    I have no doubt that the law may let him go. The law, religious, and sometimes even friends and family...have never really supported the thought of Gay people. Lend a hand to children, young teens, and even adults. Because they are no different from you and I.

    Larry gave his heart to a child...proving that even in death he was an innocent spirit. At least now...his soul lives on in that shild, and we can remember that face. The National Day of Silence...Is a day where everyone should stand up and protect what they believe in. And I BELIEVE THAT GAYS HAVE A RIGHT TOO!

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