David J. Templeton
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The Reverend David J. Templeton (1954- March 24, 1997) was a minister of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland who was murdered in 1997 after he was 'outed' as a gay man by the Sunday Life newspaper.
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[edit] Christian ministry
Templeton was a graduate of the University of Ulster at Coleraine (B.A.), Queen's University of Belfast, (M.Th.), and Princeton Theological Seminary (M.Div.), and served as Minister of Trinity, Greyabbey Presbyterian Church near Newtownards, County Down; and previously as Assistant Minister of Duncairn and St Enoch's Presbyterian Church in Belfast.
[edit] Death
On 7 February, 1997 three men wearing balaclavas entered his home in north Belfast, Northern Ireland, and beat him baseball bats with spikes driven through them. Following the attack, which had the elements of a paramilitary punishment beating, Templeton was found with a fractured jaw, fractures to both legs and multiple cuts and abrasions to his arms and legs. At the time of the attack, he was Northern Ireland's longest surviving kidney transplantee.
He remained in hospital for several weeks and died on 24 March after suffering a heart attack. He was 43 years old. He was buried in Larne, Co. Antrim. No group has claimed responsibility for his murder, but it is widely believed that the assault was carried out by elements of the Ulster Volunteer Force, a loyalist paramilitary group.
When the attack took place, Templeton was living in the Ballyduff estate in Newtownabbey. He had recently stepped down as Minister of Trinity Presbyterian Church, Greyabbey, following a front page story in the Sunday Life newspaper which revealed that he had recently been stopped by customs officials at Belfast International Airport in possession of a gay pornographic video. Templeton co-operated with the authorities and acknowledged that he had purchased the video quite legally from a high street chain store while he was on holiday in Amsterdam. After investigation, including a search of his church manse, the Royal Ulster Constabulary determined to take no further action. A customs official subsequently approached the Sunday Life newspaper and received payment for detailing the incident and revealing Templeton's identity. Following exposure by the press, he stood down as Minister of his congregation, having been told by congregational leaders that his position was untenable. Left without a home, he moved into a rented council house in the Ballyduff estate while exploring alternative career opportunities.
[edit] Allegations of police collusion
In 2002, David Templeton's murder was re-examined using the latest forensic science techniques, but this did not lead to any arrests. In 2004, Johnston Brown, a retired detective sergeant, claimed that the RUC covered up murders by Mark Haddock, a UVF commander and RUC informer. Templeton identified Haddock in hospital as his assailant. In October 2005, the Police Ombudsman issued a report implicating six special branch officers in a cover-up of more than a dozen UVF murders and failing to act on evidence that linked an informer to at least eight murders, including that of David Templeton. To date, no-one has ever been arrested in relation to the murder of David Templeton.