The National Gay
and Lesbian Task Force, hoping to prod Detroit police
into reopening the case, posted a $25,000 reward Tuesday for
information on the circumstances surrounding
the death of gay senior citizen Andrew Anthos.
Michigan's
Triangle Foundation, meanwhile, planned to send volunteers
and staff Tuesday night to canvass people living near
where Anthos was found, hoping to find witnesses to
the alleged crime.
Wayne County's
medical examiner said last month that Anthos's February 23
death was from injuries probably suffered in a fall that
exacerbated his degenerative spinal condition and
that the evidence did not necessarily support reports
that he had been attacked.
Detroit police
then closed the case.
Relatives,
relying on independent accounts from a witness and from
Anthos himself, say he was beaten by a young man who
called him a gay slur, followed him off a city bus,
and hit him in the back of the head with what Anthos
thought was a pipe.
"If you want to
say he wasn't murdered, OK. But you can't say he
wasn't attacked, that it wasn't a hate crime," Anthos's
cousin Athena Fedenis told the Associated Press.
Fedenis, who
talked to Anthos in the hospital, said he was trying to help
a friend whose wheelchair had gotten stuck in a snow
bank when he was attacked.
The wheelchair
user did not see the attack but provided a description of
a man at the scene that police used to develop a sketch of a
suspect, Detroit police spokesman Leon Rahmaan told
reporters.
To view a large
version of the police sketch, go to www.tri.org/violence/anthos_killer_sketch_lg.jpg.
(Barbara Wilcox, The Advocate)