As the Columbine High School community – and the rest of the country –
struggles to understand the reasons behind Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold's
Tuesday killing spree, more facts are emerging about the nature of the
harassment they suffered at the hands of their classmates.
One rumor that refuses to go away is that the two were gay – a story
that led many to abuse them in life, and now, denounce them in death.
"They're freaks," said Ben Oakley, an angry sophomore from the soccer
team, visiting the memorials in Clement Park for the first time Thursday.
"They were in the Trench Coat Mafia, and that's something around our school
that we consider freaks." He said students picked on the pair "all the time."
"Nobody really liked them, just cause they ..." He paused, then
continued. "The majority of them were gay. So everyone would make fun of them."
Several self-described jocks volunteered similar rumors Wednesday and
Thursday. "[A friend] used to tell me how they would take showers together,"
a member of the football team said. "He told me most of them were gay."
Other students reported sightings of the pair, and other Mafia members,
"touching" one another, holding hands or groping in the hallways. But the
stories were generally vague, secondhand and never from students who
personally knew members of the group. Oakley's reply when asked to clarify
what he knew was typical: "They would touch each other in school. People
have seen them. One of them last year went up to a kid I know and did that,"
he said, demonstrating a crotch-grab on himself. When asked whether he was
referring to Harris and Klebold specifically, he admitted, "I don't know,"
then added, "People in the group."
The media has mostly ignored the gay rumors, although on Tuesday the
Drudge Report quoted from Internet postings claiming that the Trench Coat
Mafia was a gay conspiracy to kill jocks at Columbine, a claim with no
apparent basis in fact. A few newspapers have mentioned the gay rumors in
passing. The Philadelphia Inquirer quoted Mike Smith, a senior point guard
on Columbine's state championship basketball team, saying jocks taunted the
pair by calling them gay. "They were ones you'd make fun of," Smith admitted.
And according to Thursday's Drudge Report, which was still hyping the
gay angle, the Grand Junction (Colo.) Daily Sentinel quoted another student
saying the Trench Coat Mafia was widely viewed as gay. "Boys would hold
hands in the halls sometimes," sophomore Jon Vandermark told the paper.
"They were called freaks, homos and everything in between."
Not a single friend or acquaintance of Harris and Klebold confirmed the
gay rumors. All either denied the story or said they had no idea about the
sexual orientation of either student. "It's the stupidest thing I ever
heard," said senior Melissa Snow, who had known Klebold since middle school,
but only had limited contact with him this year, since he joined the Trench
Coat Mafia.
Several students expressed anger at the jocks for spreading rumors to
defame the two in death with the same slurs that dogged them through life.
Dustin Gorton, a good friend of Harris and Klebold, was particularly
outraged. "I think it'd be really funny if you tried to tell their
girlfriends that they were gay," he said. Gorton, a brawny 6-foot senior
dressed in camouflage pants, said prom pictures had been taken with Harris
and Klebold and their girlfriends, but hadn't been developed. He promised
that the media would never see the pictures, or find the two young women.
"You're never going to get those names. [The girlfriends] are so far
hidden, and they are so screwed up right now," he said. Gorton described
himself as a "nontraditional jock" who played Doom on the Internet with the
two killers, as well as baseball with a team outside the school. He said he
was not a member of the Trench Coat Mafia.
Whatever the truth about Harris and Klebold's sexual orientation, it's
clear that "gay" is one of the worst epithets to use against a high school
student in Littleton. Eddie, a sophomore who recently moved from Littleton
to Denver, said he knew firsthand the kind of ostracism Klebold and Harris
suffered due to rumors they were gay (Eddie's name has been changed because
of his vulnerability to retaliation). He grew up in Littleton and came out
as gay in eighth grade at Deer Creek Middle School, which feeds students to
both Columbine and nearby Chatfield High School (where Columbine students
will return to school, on a staggered afternoon session, when classes resume,
likely sometime next week).
"One year everyone loved me," he said. "The next year I was the most
hated kid in the whole school." Jocks were his worst tormentors, Eddie said,
and he described one in particular who pelted him with rocks, wrote "faggot"
and "we hate you" on his locker and confronted him in the hallway with taunts
like: "I heard the faggot got butt-fucked last night."
"It gets to the point where you're crying in school because the people
won't leave you alone," he said. "The teachers don't do anything about it."
Eddie attempted suicide several times that year, and eventually spent time in
a mental hospital. "People don't realize how mean kids are. It can drive
you to the point of insanity. What they want to do is make you cry. They
want to hurt you. It's horrible. I hope that the one thing people learn out
of this whole thing is to stop teasing people."
Eddie doesn't condone what Harris and Klebold did, but said he
understood what drove them to it. "I think that those two kids were
tormented, and finally one day they just snapped. They couldn't take it
anymore, and instead of taking it out on themselves, they took it out on
other people. I took it out on myself. But it was a daily thought: 'Boy
would I really like to hurt someone. Boy would I like to see them dead.' If
you don't get help for it, you'll always think that."
Like gays, Goths in Littleton are finding themselves ostracized now, due
to reports Klebold and Harris were into the Goth scene. On Thursday, Andrew
Mitchell, a frail-looking young Goth from nearby Lakewood High School, showed
up at the memorial site dressed head to foot in black. He was a striking
sight, all alone, shivering in the foot of fresh snow: black on black on
black, pale white skin, his black hair long on top, shaved skin-close on the
sides; a silver and blue ribbon of support for the victims on his lapel. He
received a chilly reception. The grieving crowd left an empty perimeter of
at least 10 feet around him.
When asked "Why are you here?" he replied, "To pay my respects to the
people here." But he also had a plea for those dismissing the killers as
aberrant psychos. "Picture these kids," he implored. "For years being
thrown around, treated horribly. After a while you can't stand it anymore.
That's not to say that they were right to do what they did. They were
completely wrong. There's nothing right or proper about it. But there are
reasons for why they did it."
At that, a reporter twice his size got in his face. He chastised
Mitchell for his comments, which he said "would just devastate the family
members of those killed."
"Picture a 17- or 18-year-old going through hell," Mitchell retorted.
"The hell of their life for four straight years. I understand it. When you
get to a point where you have no one in the world to turn to, and I guarantee
that's how they felt, they felt there was nothing they could do."