Sheriff Claims He Didn't Know Anti-Sodomy Laws Weren't Valid Anymore

The East Baton Rouge sheriff who used Louisiana's defunct anti-sodomy law to arrest a dozen gay men since 2011 now says he didn't know the law was invalidated by the Supreme Court.



"To our knowledge, the Sheriff’s office was never contacted or told that the law was not enforceable or prosecutable," a statement from the Sheriff's Office claims. It was issued Sunday after The Advocate newspaper in Louisiana exposed the illegal undercover sting operation.



That explanation doesn't appear to satisfy Metro Councilman John Delgado.



“Does he know that slavery is no longer around?” an outraged Delgado told The Advocate newspaper in Louisiana. “Does he know that we have cars and no longer horse and buggies?”



The newspaper now reports that Delgado is demanding apologies be issued to the 12 men who were arrested, one as recent as this month.



According to local LGBT rights group Capital City Alliance, the sheriff has committed to no longer enforcing the obsolete law and will work with state legislators to have it removed from the books.



At first, a spokesman for Sheriff Sid J. Gautreaux told the newspaper that it didn't matter the Supreme Court ruled anti-sodomy laws unconstitutional a decade ago, it's still on the books in Louisiana, so they were still arresting men for it.



But on Sunday the Sheriff's Office issued a lengthy, new statement on Facebook claiming officers had not "set out with the intent to target or embarrass any part of our law-abiding community."



The statement explains the strange logic officers followed, starting with the belief children were in danger in the park where police met the men, and that deputies "used a statute that they felt fit the situation."



To be clear, according to the newspaper's report, undercover officers picked up gay men at a local park and lured them back to the privacy of their apartments. Then they were arrested when it was presumed they'd be having sex. No money was exchanged, which would have made it illegal. But otherwise the local district attorney refused to prosecute, saying there's nothing illegal about what happened.

The U.S. Supreme Court invalidated anti-sodomy laws in 2003 with the Lawrence v. Texas case but some states still have them on the books. Salon recently noted that some 22 states still have a version on the books, 13 of which specifically target same-sex couples. In Virginia, the Republican candidate for governor, Ken Cuccinelli, has actually sued to keep the law in tact while serving as the state's attorney general.

The East Baton Rouge Sheriff's Office on Sunday had to issue yet another statement after its first one was lambasted on Facebook and by Delgado.



"The goal of our statement was to express our intent to the public, which was to keep the parks safe," it states. "We admit, however, the approach needs to change. We are not making excuses, simply stating we will learn from this, make changes and move forward."



Read the complete initial explanation on the second page.

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