A
Nevada father shot and killed his 14-year-old son because he couldn’t
accept his son's sexual orientation, according to the son's former
foster mom.
On
Thursday afternoon, 53-year-old Wendell Melton shot his son, Giovanni
Melton, in the apartment where Giovanni lived alone. According to Sonja
Jones, Giovanni’s former foster mom, Wendell caught Giovanni with his
boyfriend before he pulled out a gun.
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According
to the Henderson Police Department, Giovanni was initially transported
to St. Rose Dominican Hospital—Siena Campus in critical condition.
“As
a result of their investigation, Henderson Police detectives determined
that Melton discharged a firearm that fatally struck his son,”
the police department said in a statement on Facebook.
He was arrested at the scene on felony charges of open murder, child
abuse, firearms possession and other various charges, and was booked
into the Henderson Detention Center.
"Giovanni was abused physically and mentally and spiritually for many, many years," Jones told News 3 Las Vegas.
Jones
said other family members told her the argument that led to Giovanni's
death was over Giovanni’s sexual orientation. She said Wendell had
threatened Giovanni before.
"He
hated the fact that his son was gay," Jones said. "I'm sure that inside
of his mind, he would rather have a dead son than a gay son."
The
Henderson Police Department said Wendell was arrested at the scene on
felony charges of open murder, child abuse, firearms possession and
other various charges. He was "booked into the Henderson Detention
Center."
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The Henderson Police Department was not immediately available to comment on Jones's allegations, but KSNV 3 reported that Wendell, a United Airlines employee and former pilot, will appear in court to face his charges this week.
Jaime
Grant, executive director of PFLAG National, an LGBTQ family and ally
organization, told NBC News that Giovanni's death is “part of
[a] broader societal issue.”
"We
have a crisis of masculinity in this country—it's obvious across the
board in this report and in the unrelenting reports on sexual assault
and also gun violence," Grant said in a statement provided to NBC News.
"Many 'normative' messages men learn as they are growing up about
stuffing their feelings, policing other men's gender and sexuality,
asserting 'dominance' from the boardroom to the bedroom, also show up in
their lives as fathers."
Giovanni is remembered as an energetic friend who “brought smiles to everyone he met.”
Coronado
High School senior Bailey Schultz, who went to school with Melton, told
the local NBC News station that “he was young and he had a lot to live
for.”
"I
hope they throw the book at him. I hope he never sees the light of
day," Jones said. "I hope every day when he looks in the mirror, he sees
his son's face."
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