person:andrew brown

  • ’Confused’ Scots teen brutally killed gay barman
    A Scottish teenager has admitted killing a gay barman who had tried to comfort him over his confused sexuality
    08 November 2012 | By Dan Littauer
    Stuart Walker was brutally killed by Roy Equierdo, who was confused about his sexuality

    A teenager has admitted killing a gay barman who tried to comfort him about his sexuality.

    Ryan Esquierdo, 19, strangled to death Stuart Walker, 28 and then set fire to his body on an industrial estate in Cumnock, Ayrshire, last October reported today STV.

    Esquierdo was originally charged with murder, but the Crown accepted his plea to the lesser charge of culpable homicide after hearing he had suffered traumatic abuse as a child.

    The High Court in Glasgow, Scotland was told today (8 November) Esquierdo a discussion with Walk about his confusion over his sexuality triggered in him an ‘uncontrollable rage’.

    Esquierdo bit, punched and stamped on Walker before grabbing him by the throat and strangling him for around four minutes until he was dead.

    The two only met by chance on the early hours of 22 October, when Walker, on his way home from a night out, found Esquierdo lying asleep on a wall and woke him up.

    The two men then walked together to the Caponacre Industrial Estate, apparently on friendly terms.

    Esquierdo had had a number of girlfreinds but his sexuality was ‘the subject of discussion by his friends’, Andrew Brown QC, prosecuting, told the court.

    Brown stated that Walker ‘was only sympathetic with [Esquierdo’s] conflicted position’.

    When the pair became intimate, Esquierdo panicked and began suffering ‘flashbacks’ to the abuse he suffered as a child.

    Brown said that although the contact between the two men was consensual, Esquierdo flared up into ‘extreme and explosive violence.

    ‘The deceased would have had no warning or sense of what was going to happen.

    ‘There is (CCTV) footage which may be the accused setting fire to his jacket which he placed on the deceased’s body.’

    Immediately after the killing Esquierdo texted his friend, Mary-Ann Dykes, who dashed to the scene where she found the teenager ‘a total wreck’ and Mr Walker’s body still burning.

    Esquierdo initially told police that he discovered Walker body and that he had been attacked and set on fire by others, but a few days later he was detained and charged with murder.

    The Crown accepted that he had diminished responsibility for the killing after psychologists reported he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Derek Ogg QC, defending, said the kiling was ‘not a gay hate crime’ but ‘far more complex than that.

    ‘I would like to place on record Ryan Esquierdo’s utter bafflement and horror that he could inflict such violence’.

    Mr Brown told the court that Walker had been a ‘well liked figure’ within the local community and that his death had been ‘devastating’ to many.

    Walker’s father died of a heart attack in February, three months after his son’s violent death.

    Judge Rita Rae QC remanded Esquierdo in custody and deferred sentencing for reports until next month.

    Walker’s family or friends, several of whom were present for the hearing, refused to make any comment afterwards.

  • #Religion in Human Evolution, part 1: the co-evolution of gods and humanity | Andrew Brown | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2012/jul/16/robert-bellah-religion-in-human-evolution

    It is an account of some of the ways in which human beings have made religions and religions have made us. The process continues, of course. If there are two faculties that make us into people, they are narration and contemplation. Religions unite them, and stimulate both. But it does much more than that.

  • The Church of England’s fudge on female bishops is breathtaking | Andrew Brown | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2012/jan/24/church-of-england-female-bishops

    The archbishops envisage that the Church of England, once it has female bishops, will continue ordaining men who do not accept these women, finding them jobs they will deign to accept, and promoting some of them to be bishops who will work to ensure the continued supply of male priests who refuse to accept female clergy. In fact, the church will pay three bishops (the formerly “flying” sees of Ebbsfleet, Richborough, and Beverley) to work full time against their female colleagues, and to nourish the resistance.

    #religion

  • Facebook is not your friend | Andrew Brown | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2010/may/14/facebook-not-your-friend

    Ever since money was invented, the people who have made money out of aimless chat have been the landlords, whether they were selling beer, coffee or a space on the web. You may think that your Facebook friends care what you’re up to, but they’d drop you like a stone if it cost them money to learn you had just become imaginary mayor of an imaginary town, or even that you had just had a row with your mother and slammed the phone down. The only people to whom that information is worth even a fraction of a penny are those who want to take advantage of it to sell you something you don’t need – except, that is for your real friends, but imaginary ones are so much more reassuring.