Gay Brazilians targeted in deadly stickups, lured by dating apps
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[August 26, 2024]
By Dani Morera Trettin
CAMBUQUIRA, Brazil (Reuters) - It was June 12, Lover's Day in Brazil.
Leo Nunes, 24, had spent a few days talking to someone he met on Hornet,
a popular gay dating app, before arranging their first encounter in Sao
Paulo's middle-class Sacoma neighborhood.
A security camera captured the moment that two men on a motorcycle
showed up in the alley where he was waiting, grabbed his phone and shot
him dead.
The Nunes family, who shared details of the investigation with Reuters,
said one suspect had been arrested. Sao Paulo police said they are
investigating the shooting as a robbery resulting in a homicide, but did
not provide further information or confirm if there had been an arrest.
Nunes was one of at least five gay men killed since March 2024 after
planning encounters through dating apps in Brazil, according to news
reports. Dozens more victims have described on social media suffering
armed robberies after being lured by fake profiles on gay dating apps.
Police have also warned of "love cons" involving straight men lured into
kidnappings, without providing figures.
The string of murders and assaults has shaken the gay community in
Brazil, which is large and vibrant but still often wary of law
enforcement. This reluctance makes it a target for criminals, according
to three people who said they had been attacked, as well as LGBT
advocates.
"Because of structural homophobia, criminals know that LGBT people are
vulnerable. They know they will be more easily intimidated," said
Wanderley Montanholi, a lawyer for the family of Heleno Veggi Dumba, a
gay doctor who was found dead in April in Sao Paulo after being shot in
the head. Montanholi said Dumba was killed by criminals in an attempted
robbery after they had lured him into an ambush through a dating app.
Sao Paulo police said they had arrested three suspects in Dumba's death
who remain in police custody awaiting trial. They declined to give more
details.
Montanholi said the crimes repeated a pattern in which criminals target
gay men through dating apps and groom them for days with fake profiles
across different social media platforms.
Police declined to comment on whether they had identified a broader
pattern of murders and robberies linked to gay dating apps, saying only
that investigators in Sao Paulo had cleared four cases involving "love
cons" in general.
Gabriel, a gay man who declined to give his surname, citing privacy,
said in late March he had arranged a date on the same street in Sacoma
where Nunes was shot dead. He was lured by the same dating profile as
several other victims, he later learned.
"One man put a gun to my stomach and asked me the password of my phone,"
he said. With that, the criminals accessed his bank accounts, stole his
savings and maxed out his credit card. Gabriel said a group of women who
offered him comfort afterwards had witnessed a nearly identical episode
the night before.
He detailed the assault in a police report and in a group chat, both
seen by Reuters, with six other men who said they had reported to law
enforcement experiencing the same violent con. Police declined to
comment on their cases.
Gabriel said he and others had also flagged their incidents involving
the same false profile to Hornet. He said the fake profile stayed online
for weeks after he made his report, which Reuters could not
independently verify.
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Adriana Rodrigues and Aurelio Nunes, parents of Leonardo Nunes, a
young man killed after being the victim of a robbery after arranging
a date using a gay dating app, poses for a photo during an interview
with Reuters in Cambuquira, Brazil, July 29, 2024. REUTERS/Carla
Carniel/File Photo
"An investigation could have happened before Leo's case. It didn't
have to get here," Gabriel said.
Gerry Monaghan, head of operations at Hornet, said that "all reports
are looked at and reviewed by Hornet."
After the killing of Nunes in June, he said the company had added
staff to a team that works around the clock responding to user
reports and changed its global reporting system to prioritize more
serious issues, without elaborating.
A spokesman for Grindr, another gay dating app, said the company is
"aware that in Brazil, digital platforms such as ours are
occasionally abused to target LGBTQ+ people."
He added that the app includes security advice and features, and the
company collaborates closely with law enforcement.
FEAR AND SHAME
Like many young LGBT Brazilians, Nunes had left his small hometown,
Cambuquira, for the more liberal metropolis of Sao Paulo four hours
away.
He planned to become a psychotherapist and help people struggling
with homelessness and addiction, his mother Adriana Rodrigues
recalled. She took comfort in the "LGBT family" that embraced him in
the big city.
Although Sao Paulo boasts a lively gay scene and the world's largest
Pride parade, friends of Nunes said they discussed their frequent
run-ins with homophobia and transphobia.
"We all had our story," said one friend, Vinicius Reis, who recalled
Nunes looking out for vulnerable members of their LGBT community,
including some forced to leave their family homes.
Nunes came out with the support of his parents in Cambuquira, who
called his death a hate crime.
"Criminals know their victims won't go to police," his father
Aurelio Nunes said, holding his wife's hand in an emotional
interview. "Sometimes, they do not even tell their family because of
shame."
The Brazilian Forum on Public Security, a civil society group
tracking public safety issues, recorded 214 murders motivated by
homophobia and transphobia last year, up 42% from 2022, while
flagging that such crimes are likely underreported.
Brazil's Supreme Court codified homophobia as a crime in 2019, but
three lawyers said in interviews that police and judges often avoid
using the label, preferring broader categories such as assault or
theft.
Vanessa Vieira, a public defender serving the LGBT community in Sao
Paulo state, said she has seen "great resistance to categorize
crimes as homophobia from judges and police officers."
That skepticism has contributed to LGBT victims' reluctance to come
forward about crimes, Vieira added.
"There is a lot of fear to report, for how it might hinder their
lives," she said.
(Reporting by Dani Morera Trettin; Editing by Stefanie Eschenbacher,
Brad Haynes and Rosalba O'Brien)
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