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Britain Will Posthumously Pardon Thousands of Gay and Bisexual Men Thousands of Men to Be Pardoned for Gay Sex, Once a Crime in Britain
(about 7 hours later)
LONDON — Britain will posthumously pardon thousands of gay and bisexual men who were convicted of sexual offenses that were decriminalized decades ago, the government announced on Thursday. In addition, the process for people who are still alive and want to clear their name will be streamlined. LONDON — The men were convicted tens of thousands of them of crimes like buggery, gross indecency and loitering with intent. They had been arrested in bars, coffee houses, bars and public bathrooms, and sometimes in the privacy of their homes and with their partners. In many cases, their only offense was seeking intimacy with another man.
The decision comes nearly three years after Queen Elizabeth II formally pardoned Alan Turing, the British mathematician regarded as one of the central figures in the development of the computer, who was convicted on charges of homosexuality in 1952. He committed suicide in 1954. Decades after homosexuality was decriminalized in Britain, the government announced on Thursday that it would posthumously pardon thousands of gay and bisexual men who were convicted, in essence, of having or seeking gay sex. Since 2012, men with such convictions who are still alive have been able to apply to have their names cleared.
The government apologized in 2009 for its treatment of Turing, who made a major contribution to Britain in World War II by cracking Germany’s Enigma coding machine, and the head of Britain’s signals intelligence agency, GCHQ, apologized in April for past discrimination against gays. The law providing for the pardons, which could take effect in a matter of months now that it has the support of the Conservative government, is named for Alan Turing, the mathematician who made a major contribution to Britain in World War II by cracking Germany’s Enigma coding machine and was a central figure in the development of the computer.
Consensual sex between men over age 21 was decriminalized in England and Wales in 1967, in Scotland in 1980 and in Northern Ireland in 1982. The age of consent for homosexual sex was reduced to 16, the same as the age of consent for heterosexual sex, in 2001. Turing was convicted on charges of homosexuality in 1952 and committed suicide in 1954. The government apologized in 2009 for its treatment of him, and in 2013, Queen Elizabeth II formally pardoned him. In April, the head of Britain’s signals intelligence agency, GCHQ, also apologized, for its past discrimination against gays.
Under a proposal that some have called the Turing Law, deceased people convicted of sexual acts that are no longer criminalized will receive an automatic pardon. While Britain, like many countries, has experienced a sharp turnabout in its attitudes toward homosexuality same-sex marriage has been legal since 2014 the announcement did not meet with uniform enthusiasm. Stonewall, an advocacy group for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality, said it did not go far enough because it still requires a case-by-case review of pardon applications by living men. Others said they wanted an apology, not a pardon.
Among them could be Oscar Wilde, the Irish playwright who was convicted and sentenced to two years of hard labor in 1895 after being accused of sodomy, although the complexity of his case makes it difficult to know for sure. He was tried not once but twice, and only after he withdraw a criminal libel lawsuit against his accuser. “I was not guilty of anything,” George Montague, 93, a gay activist and author who lives in Brighton, England and was convicted in the 1970s of gross indecency, told the BBC program “Newsnight.” “I was only guilty of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. My name was on the ‘queer list,’ which the police had in those days. And I will not accept a pardon.”
The Ministry of Justice said, however, that no deceased individuals would be singled out by name. Mr. Montague described Turing as a hero, but said he opposed the posthumous pardon. “What was he guilty of?” Mr. Montague asked. “He was guilty of the same as what they call me guilty of: being born only able to fall in love with another man.”
Under a 2012 law, many living people who were convicted of sexual offenses that are no longer illegal can apply to have their names cleared and their offenses expunged from their criminal records. Consensual sex between men over age 21 was decriminalized in England and Wales in 1967, in Scotland in 1980 and in Northern Ireland in 1982. The age of consent for homosexual sex was lowered to 16, the same as for heterosexual sex, in 2001. (Lesbian sex was not specifically outlawed in Britain, although lesbians were occasionally prosecuted under vice statutes. The pardon applies only to men.)
Under the plan announced Thursday, they will receive an automatic pardon, without additional review by the government. Some 15,000 of 65,000 men who were convicted under such laws are still alive, according to John Sharkey, a member of the House of Lords who put forward the Turing Law. The Turing Law was put forward by John Sharkey, a member of the House of Lords who championed the pardon for Turing. He estimated that 15,000 of 65,000 men convicted under laws that criminalized gay sex were still alive.
“It is hugely important that we pardon people convicted of historical sexual offences who would be innocent of any crime today,” Sam Gyimah, the parliamentary under secretary of state for prisons and probation, said in a statement. Among the deceased who might be eligible for a pardon is Oscar Wilde, the Irish playwright who was convicted and sentenced to two years of hard labor in 1895 after being accused of sodomy, although the complexity of his case makes it difficult to know for sure. He was tried not once but twice, and only after he withdraw a criminal libel lawsuit against his accuser.
John Nicolson, a Scottish member of Parliament, has put forward a bill, which Parliament is scheduled to debate on Friday, that would offer an automatic blanket pardon to living Britons convicted under offenses like gross indecency that were used to target gay and bisexual men. Since October 2012, men who were convicted of sexual offenses that are no longer illegal have been able to apply to the Home Office to have those crimes expunged under what is known as the “disregard process.” So far, 335 applications have been received, and 84 granted.
Mr. Gyimah said the Conservative-led government did not support the legislation because it “could lead, in some cases,” to pardons for people whose convictions included offenses that are still crimes, like sex with a minor and non-consensual sexual activity. Under the plan announced Thursday, those men also will receive an automatic pardon.
Paul Twocock, director of campaigns, policy and research at Stonewall, an advocacy group for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality, said it disagreed with the government’s interpretation of Mr. Nicolson’s bill. “It is hugely important that we pardon people convicted of historical sexual offenses who would be innocent of any crime today,” Sam Gyimah, the parliamentary under secretary of state for prisons and probation, said in a statement.
“We welcome the government announcement to issue a posthumous pardon to all gay and bi men unjustly prosecuted for being who they are, but we don’t think it goes far enough,” he said in a statement. Under the Turing Law, the pardons would apply only to offenses that are no longer crimes. Men who had sex with someone who did not give consent, or who was not 16 or older at the time, will not be eligible for a pardon, nor would men whose crime would now “constitute the offense of sexual activity in a public lavatory,” which is still a crime.
Matt Houlbrook, a professor of cultural history at University of Birmingham and the author of “Queer London: Perils and Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957,” said he was worried that the posthumous pardons contributed to oversimplification of both history and the identities of men like Turing. The last provision could be a significant obstacle to a pardon for many men, given that as recently as the 1970s, public bathrooms were often a destination for men seeking same-sex intimacy.
“The metaphor of the closet fails to capture the nature of queer life before 1967: interwar London was home to a vibrant urban culture that was perhaps more visible than at any time before the 1970s,” he wrote in a blog post, when the debate over Turing’s pardon was underway. John Nicolson, a member of Parliament from Scotland, has put forward a bill that would offer an automatic blanket pardon to men convicted of having gay sex. That bill, which Parliament is scheduled to debate on Friday, has support from Stonewall, the advocacy group, but appears likely to be blocked by the Conservative majority in the House of Commons.
He also noted that gay identity meant something very different decades ago. “The most remarkable thing about queer urban culture is that it was, to a large extent, composed of and created by men who never thought themselves queer,” he said. Mr. Gyimah said the Nicolson proposal was too broad. “A blanket pardon, without the detailed investigations carried out by the Home Office under the disregard process, could see people guilty of an offense which is still a crime today claiming to be pardoned,” he said. “This would cause an extraordinary and unnecessary amount of distress to victims.”
In an interview, Mr. Houlbrook said he thought the government’s announcement had “symbolic and practical importance” for those who are still alive, but still found it insufficient. Matt Houlbrook, a professor of cultural history at the University of Birmingham and the author of “Queer London: Perils and Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957,” said he was worried that the pardons might help oversimplify both gay history and the identities of men like Turing. His book describes urban gay life in the early 20th century as more vibrant and open than is commonly understood, and as a world in which sexual behavior and sexual identity were not yet fused.
“At the same time, a retrospective pardon doesn’t do much to atone for the realities of what it was like to be arrested and prosecuted at the time,” he said. The gesture, he said, was only part of a reckoning with “the uncomfortable truths from its past” that British society needs to go through. “The most remarkable thing about queer urban culture is that it was, to a large extent, composed of and created by men who never thought themselves queer,” Mr. Houlbrook wrote.
In an interview on Thursday, Mr. Houlbrook said the government’s announcement could have “symbolic and practical importance” for men still seeking to clear their names, but he argued that the pardons were somewhat beside the point.
“A retrospective pardon doesn’t do much to atone for the realities of what it was like to be arrested and prosecuted at the time,” he said.
George Chauncey, a history professor at Yale, said he was not aware of any similar blanket pardon being offered in the United States for sodomy, degenerate disorderly conduct or other charges commonly used against men caught trying to pick up other men. The closest, he said, is the Obama administration’s policy, since 2011, of allowing military veterans who were discharged for homosexuality to apply to have their discharges reclassified as “honorable” rather than “undesirable.” But those decisions are made on a case-by-case basis.