Miami

Ex-Director of LGBTQ Organization Heard in Video Welcoming Hate Crime Suspects to Gala

Tony Lima said the men had recently volunteered with SAVE and wanted to give back to the community they had harmed.

A Miami-based LGBTQ organization has terminated its executive director after he welcomed four men charged with hate crimes in an anti-gay attack to an equality gala last month.

SAVE's board of directors said in a statement Monday that Tony Lima's employment was terminated following the Champions of Equality gala on June 14.

"We deeply regret the damage this has caused the LGBTQ+ community in South Florida, particularly during a time when the country was reflecting on the riots at Stonewall as well as the many other hardships and abuses that our community continues to endure," the board's statement read in part.

NBC 6 exclusively obtained a short video clip from SAVE where Lima is heard introducing and welcoming the men during the gala.

"Finally tonight we are joined by four young men wrongfully accused of a hate crime in Miami Beach last year," Lima says in the video.

In this short clip provided by LGBTQ organization SAVE, now-former executive director Tony Lima is heard welcoming and introducing four men accused of anti-gay hate crimes during the Champions of Equality gala in June. 

The rest of the video cuts off, but notes also obtained by NBC 6 show the rest of Lima's comments during the event. His notes introduce each suspect by their first name and that SAVE supports them in their "fight for justice." But SAVE's board-approved run of the show does not include Lima's remarks on the men. 

lima notes
SAVE
NBC 6 also obtained Tony Lima's notes for the gala that introduce the suspects.

Lima apologized Friday in a Facebook video and said that the men – Luis M. Alonso, Juan C. Lopez, Adonis Diaz and Pablo Reinaldo Romo – bought their own tickets after volunteering with the group. He said he "wanted them to feel welcomed," but didn't consult with board members before including them in his remarks at the June 14 party.

The four men are accused of attacking two men, shouting anti-gay slurs following last year's gay pride parade in Miami Beach.

All four men saw their initial aggravated battery charges increased after the State Attorney's Office filed hate crime charges in the case. Each face up to 30 years in prison if convicted.

The president of SAVE is in hot water after welcoming four men who were suspected in an alleged hate crime to the organization’s pride gala. NBC 6’s Marissa Bagg reports.
Copyright AP - Associated Press
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