Jeffrey Montgomery

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Jeffrey Montgomery
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Born (1953-05-09)May 9, 1953
Detroit, Michigan
Occupation US lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) activist

Jeffrey Montgomery (born 1953 in Detroit, Michigan), is an American lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) activist. Montgomery was the founding Executive Director of Triangle Foundation[1][2] since the organization was founded in 1991 until September 2007.

Political activism

Montgomery has appeared as a guest and commentator on television and radio programs, in newspapers, and as a presenter at national conferences. He is an advocate for human rights, civil rights and recognition of LGBT bias crimes.

Montgomery serves as a resource on LGBT-related homicide and "homosexual (gay) panic" defenses and his analysis has informed national media, such as the New York Times, Court TV and USA Today on those topics. In 2001, Montgomery was a featured participant in an A&E Network documentary about the Matthew Shepard case.

In 1994, Montgomery led a delegation of gay community leaders in a meeting with then-Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer.[citation needed] Montgomery serves on the Chief's Crime Prevention Advisory Committee, Detroit Police Department, and was a member of the Bias Crime Response Task Force of the Michigan Commission on Civil Rights.[citation needed]

File:20.NAMESProject.AIDS.Quilt.WDC.10oct92.jpg
Jeffrey Montgomery attends The NAMES Project's AIDS Quilt Memorial Display Candlelight Vigil at the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday Night, 10 October 1992.

Montgomery was the co-chair of the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP), for which he was also a national spokesperson,[citation needed] and was a member of the Steering Committee of the Michigan Alliance Against Hate Crime.[citation needed]

Montgomery was among a group of LGBT activists, representing NCAVP, invited to Washington, D.C., from 1997 to 2000, for meetings with senior policy officials at the White House, the Office of the Attorney General, and the Department of Justice.[citation needed] He is certified by the U.S. Justice Department as a faculty trainer in the Department’s National Hate Crime Curricula.[citation needed]

In 2002, Montgomery was invited, with about a dozen other LGBT leaders from across the country, to meet with and inform United States Senators about the issues and challenges facing the LGBT community.[citation needed]

Montgomery is as a speaker at conferences, as keynoter, and on college campuses throughout the country. In 1999 he delivered the inaugural Matthew Shepard Memorial Lecture at Brown University. That address, "America...You Kill Me," was published in the journal, Vital Speeches of the Day.[citation needed]

In 2000, Montgomery was also selected by the Gill Foundation as one of 20 LGBT activists to participate in a program designed by the Center for Creative Leadership in Colorado Springs.[citation needed]

Montgomery is one of the founding board members of the Woodhull Freedom Foundation (also known as the Woodhull Sexual Freedom Alliance).[citation needed]

He is an inaugural member of the WikiQueer Global Advisory Board and serves as Strategic Counsel to the wiki's parent organization, The Aequalitas Project.[3]

Honors

In May 2003, Michigan Governor Jennifer M. Granholm honored Jeffrey Montgomery’s work with a special tribute, calling him a “hero and living legend.” The Governor also noted that “he is among the most visible and accomplished advocates for safety and equality of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people in Michigan history.”[citation needed]

In 1993, the Detroit City Council made Montgomery a recipient of the first of three "Spirit of Detroit" awards and a City Council Testimonial Resolution for being "a strong leader in a difficult position for those who have been ignored in their fight for civil rights..."[citation needed] In 1994 he received the first "Unsung Hero" award from the Detroit Human Rights Commission, and the Political Action Award from the lesbian and gay community of Michigan.[citation needed] In addition that year, Hardee’s Restaurants and WKBD-TV also named him a "Hometown Hero".[citation needed]

In 1997 Montgomery received a Golden Apple Award from the Roeper School, as a role model for students and for reflecting the Roeper philosophy of "diversity and respect…and that everyone has the right to the possibilities of their own identity."[citation needed] The Oakland County branch of the ACLU honored Montgomery for "exemplary achievement and courage in the arena of human rights."[citation needed]

The Michigan Legislature has twice commended Montgomery with Special Tributes: in 1997, recognizing "his efforts in the struggle for gay and lesbian rights," and in 2000, citing his "relentless" advocacy for an end to bias crimes and assaults on the glbt community from the radical right.[citation needed]

In August 1999, Montgomery was named one of the "Best and Brightest" national LGBT activists by The Advocate magazine.[citation needed] The Human Rights Campaign, in 2000, recognized him with an Equality Award for Community Advocacy.[citation needed]

In May 2003, Montgomery was named, along with twelve other prominent leaders, a "Michiganian of the Year" by the Detroit News for contributions to the state and community and as an individual who makes a difference.[citation needed]

In September, 2012, the Woodhull Sexual Freedom Alliance honored Jeffrey with its Vicki Sexual Freedom Award.[citation needed]

References

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