The Tenacious Unicorn Ranch made a transgender haven. Then the violent
threats began
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[July 17, 2021]
By Leah Millis
WESTCLIFFE, Colorado (Reuters) -The ranch
hand walks along rocky ground, the beam of her flashlight cutting
through the moonlit night. She holds a shotgun loosely at her side
during her patrol of an alpaca ranch founded as a haven for transgender
and non-binary people.
Penny Logue, who grew up on a farm, started the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
in Colorado in 2018. It had been two years since Logue had begun her
transition and the U.S. Human Rights Campaign, an LGBTQ advocacy group,
had just declared 2017 the deadliest documented year so far for members
of the trans and gender non-conforming community, with 31 people killed.
Logue says she saw that many in the LGBTQ community had nowhere to feel
safe and struggled to find employment, housing, and peace of mind.
"You have people that are brilliant, that just can't interact with
society in a normal way," Logue says. "They just get shoved down every
time they pop their head up and you watch it over and over and over
again."
Logue initially rented a ranch in northern Colorado to raise alpacas,
whose wool is sold as a prized weaving material. In March 2020 the
operation moved just outside the small town of Westcliffe in southern
Colorado with 86 alpaca, 20 chickens, 40 ducks, several dogs and cats,
and nine people.
On the ranch, gender is never assumed. Inhabitants are free to love who
they love and be who they are. Rainbow and anti-fascist flags adorn the
walls, including one featuring the three arrows of the World War II-era
German anti-Nazi, anti-fascist Iron Front.
"I got here and I experienced a love and acceptance that I never did
before," says ranch co-owner Bonnie Nelson. "I had true family for the
first time."
AN UNSETTLING DEMONSTRATION
As they settled into Custer County, the newcomers offered to do odd jobs
for neighbors, started a community garden, and helped helm a recycling
program.
Logue says that won them a number of residents' support, despite some
ideological differences with conservative Custer County, home to about
5,000 people.
On July 4, 2020, Logue and Nelson headed into town for coffee at their
favorite spot. The Westcliffe Independence parade had been canceled
because of pandemic restrictions. Logue and Nelson saw a steady stream
of protesters, a number of whom were openly carrying guns. Some wore
body armor.
Amid American flags, one demonstrator carried a banner bearing the
emblem of right-wing militia group the Three Percenters, video of the
event shows. Another wore a shirt that declared, 'It's OK to be White.'
The phrase, according to the Anti-Defamation League, has become a
rallying cry among white supremacists.
Logue said she was the grandchild of Armenian genocide survivors and
grew up on stories that taught her to respond to "anything that looks
like fascism." She wrote in a tweet that same day: "The Fourth of July
parade in #westcliffe was a Nazi propaganda parade, I've never been so
unsettled."
Messages and calls expressing transphobic hatred and disdain for the
ranchers' anti-fascism began then, according to Logue. Reuters has
reviewed several hostile and anonymous online messages, two containing
death threats. One was an image manipulated to show a gun pointed at the
ranch house.
In March, a volunteer escorted two armed men away at gunpoint after they
were spotted climbing the hill toward the ranch house, Logue says. The
identity of the men is unknown.
The ranchers talked about the hostility in media interviews, hoping
increased attention would scare off harassers. Logue says they installed
cameras, obtained body armor, began to build a taller fence, and stepped
up firearms training.
[to top of second column]
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J Stanley, 29, leads an alpaca to get sheared during "Shear-A-Palooza"
at the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Westcliffe, Colorado, U.S. June
23, 2021. The event was a multiple day party at the ranch held to
attract volunteers and to encourage community members to come to the
ranch to help shear the ranch’s alpaca or to simply mingle.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
The ranchers have not reported any of the threats to
the Custer County Sheriff's Department. The ranchers said they
declined to do so in part because they had seen Custer County
Sheriff Shannon Byerly in a video speaking at a 2015 rally held near
Westcliffe on the anniversary of the founding of the right-wing Oath
Keepers, whose members believe the federal government is encroaching
on their rights and who try to recruit, among others, law
enforcement officers.
Byerly confirmed to Reuters that he spoke at the rally, but said
that he does not belong to the Oath Keepers. In the speech, a video
of which was reviewed by Reuters, he spoke about gun rights and his
feeling that some unnamed U.S. leaders were showing signs of
"tyranny." The Oath Keepers did not immediately reply to requests
for comment.
Byerly said his deputies checked out media reports of threats
against the ranch and found no evidence. He said ranchers were not
contacted for the informal investigation because his deputies did
not feel welcome at the ranch.
In an initial interview with Reuters, he described a
"confrontational" exchange between armed ranchers and one of his
deputies, who he said was barred from entering the ranch when he
went to investigate an April 22 car accident involving a ranch hand.
Footage from the deputy's body cam video during his visit the day of
the accident, obtained through a public records request, shows a
single ranch hand, not visibly carrying weapons. The ranch hand told
Reuters she was unarmed. The video shows the ranch hand greeting the
deputy at the gate, being questioned about the accident, and
offering contact information. Asked about the discrepancies, the
sheriff acknowledged in a subsequent interview he had been mistaken
in his account.
ALWAYS ON GUARD
On a recent day in late June, ranchers and volunteers formed a
semi-circle, spreading their arms wide and corralling a few dozen
fuzzy alpaca into a holding pen for shearing.
May Quinty Dynamic, a transgender woman from Denver, was among the
volunteers. Dynamic said she was thrilled to be surrounded by so
many other transgender people. She met Logue, who, like her, also
began to transition at the age of 35.
"I've been able to talk to everybody and tell my little story over
and over," Dynamic said.
After a long day, Logue made her way back to her room as the sun
began to sink, sending shafts of light through thick indigo storm
clouds above the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.
Sore from a day of wrangling alpaca, Logue collapsed onto her
mattress and closed her eyes. Outside her door, the sounds of warm
chatter and dinner prep filtered down the hallway from the kitchen.
As she began to drift off to sleep, she rolled toward the edge of
the bed. Logue's hand fell off the side of the mattress and came to
rest, instinctively, on her rifle.
(Reporting by Leah MillisEditing by Donna Bryson and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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