18jHst M l * September 21.2001
nTÏ 77 Tïï! 7 ÏT 1 news
^ Elise Campbell, GRI
T he V ictims L ist
Tragedy takes the lives of several gay people
by B ob R o eh r
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D avid W. O wens
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falling debris from the World Trade
Center as he administered last rites
to a fallen firefighter.
Gay journalist Andy Humm
recalled Judge as “a decent, wonder
ful human being...I saw him at
many demonstrations for gay and
AID S causes, showing up in his
Franciscan monks cassock.”
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avid Charlebois, 38, was at the
controls as co-pilot of Ameri
can Airlines Flight 77, a Boe
ing 757 that took off from Dulles
International Airport hound for Los
Angeles. It would slam into the
Pentagon, just a few miles from his
home in Washington, D.C., near
Dupont Circle. He is survived by
his partner of 14 years, Tom Hay.
Charlebois did not think of
himself as an activist, hut in many
♦
senses he was, as a member of the
National Gay Pilots Association, in
being out at work and in fighting
for domestic partner benefits for
pilots. He also shared a sense of
community and responsibility in
volunteering with the Sexual
Minority Youth Assistance League.
Charlebois had a passion for
printmaking and collecting, in
trigued by the technical processes
behind the images. He and Hay
doted on their dog, Chance.
Joe Ferguson, 39, was a passenger on that
flight. As director of the National Geographic
Society’s Geography Education Outreach Pro
gram, he was accompa
nying three sixth-graders
and three teachers from
Washington on a field
trip the students had
won. He lived on Capi
tol Hill.
Lt. Gen. Timothy J.
Maude, 53, was at work
when Right 77 slammed
into the Pentagon. He
was the highest-ranking
Charlebois
officer to die. As the
Army’s deputy chief of staff for personnel in
recent months, he was responsible for imple
menting “don’t ask, don’t tell."
Maude met several times with representa
tives of the Serviccmembcrs Legal Defense Net
work in putting together a training program to
implement the anti-gay policy fairly. T he
Army’s approach is considered superior to the
other services.
“It is a tremendous loss,” said C. Dixon
Osburn, the network’s executive director.
“There is no person as good or as knowledgeable
on the issue. He is somelxxly who we considered
a friend.”
D
serving the community since 1975
ay men and lesbians are every
where in the terror, tragedy and
determined survival that have
gripped the United States ever
since hijackers seized four aircraft
Sept. 11 and forever changed our lives.
Dan Brandhorst, 42, Ron Gamboa, 33, and
their son, David, 3, were returning to their
home in Los Angles from a vacation at Cape
Cod, Mass., on United Airlines Flight 175 when
it slammed into the second World Trade Center
tower. The pair had met 14 years ago in New
York and later moved to the West Coast when
attorney Brandhorst was transferred by his firm,
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Gamboa managed a Gap store in Santa
Monica. They adopted David as an infant and
were active in the PopLuck Club for gay dads.
Also on the plane was Graham Berkeley,
37, an English
man who resided
in Boston and
worked for the
software compa
ny Compuware.
“He was a won
derful, brilliant,
ballsy,
British
brat, and 1 mean
all o f those as
c o m p lim e n ts ,”
David Brandhorst
said his friend
and Ron Gamboa
Andrew S u lli
van, who had seen him in Provincetown
shortly before the flight.
The Rev. Mychal Judge was chaplain to the
New York City Fire Department, although the
Franciscan priest was better known as “Father
Mike." He was struck and killed by a piece of
T he A fterm a th
undreds of gay men and lesbians from the
greater New York area likely are among
the estimated 5,000 people still missing and pre
sumed dead. What is different from the grieving
H