
02.16.2011 8:55am EST
(New York) A man accused of spewing anti-gay and racist
insults while attacking a patron at one of New York City’s oldest gay bars
pleaded guilty Tuesday to hate-crime assault in an episode his lawyer said was
spurred by drunkenness.
Frederick
Giunta, 45, is expected to get a 3 1/2-year prison sentence for the October
incident at Julius, a Manhattan tavern where a 1966 “sip-in” helped usher in
the gay-rights movement.
The assault, which unfolded shortly after several other
incidents authorities characterized as anti-gay attacks around the city,
spurred an outcry from gay-rights advocates.
In Giunta’s case, police said the victim was trying to
defuse a dispute between Giunta and another customer Oct. 11 when Giunta hit
the victim in the face, disparaging his race and using an anti-gay epithet. The
victim, whose name authorities did not disclose, is black.
Giunta’s lawyer, Hershel Katz, said Giunta’s behavior
stemmed from inebriation, not malice.
“He was drunk as a skunk and, basically, his stupidity
kicked in, more than anything else,” Katz said after court Tuesday. “He doesn’t
bear anyone ill will.”
Giunta also pleaded guilty to attempted robbery for
grabbing at another man’s wallet and punching him at another bar earlier that
evening. He is jailed while awaiting his sentencing, set for March 8.
Julius’ website stresses that it welcomes “ALL visitors and
locals” but notes that it has been a gay gathering place since the 1950s. In
1966, several gay-rights activists went to the Greenwich Village bar and
ordered drinks – with journalists in tow – to protest liquor regulators’ policies
against serving gays.
The “sip-in” contributed to changes that ultimately allowed
gay bars to operate openly.
Current owner Helen Buford didn’t immediately return a call
Tuesday but said after the October incident that staffers had been briefed on
security.
The alleged attack at Julius unfolded little more than a
week after two men were accused of a gay-bashing at the nearby Stonewall Inn,
where patrons’ resistance to a 1969 police raid became a formative moment in
the gay rights movement.
The same day as the Stonewall Inn incident this fall, Bronx
gang members beat and tortured four people in an anti-gay rage, authorities
said; seven people face charges in the Bronx violence.
A day earlier, a group of male friends bidding an
affectionate good night to each other were attacked in an anti-gay assault in
Manhattan’s gay-friendly Chelsea neighborhood, prosecutors said.
The incident at Julius amplified alarm at the New York City
Anti-Violence Project, which works to combat attacks on gays and others. A
representative didn’t immediately respond to telephone and e-mail messages
Tuesday evening.