Albert Toney III
Albert Toney III is a civil rights activist who retired from the Worcester Massachusetts Police Department after being shot in the line of duty.
Early life
Albert Toney III was born and raised in Worcester, Massachusetts. He is the son of a Massachusetts State Police Sergeant and an elementary school teacher.In 1987, Toney joined the Worcester Massachusetts Police Department, and in 1991, was wounded in a shooting incident that killed his then life partner, Robert Domiano Jr, and another friend, John Ellison, who later died from the result of his injuries. The shooter was eventually sentenced to life imprisonment for his actions after a nationwide search took place and the perpetrator found. Toney became the first openly gay police officer on the Worcester Police Department and publicly declared that he would focus his efforts on gay civil rights.
He retired from the police force in 1995 as a result of his injuries from the shooting, but continued to educate others on homosexuality and the stigmas attached to being open about it to the public.
In 2001, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court overturned the 1992 first-degree murder conviction of the person who wounded Toney in 1991, and ordered a new trial based on how the original presiding judge instructed the jury on the elements of first-degree murder. On March 31, 2003, the shooter was re-convicted of first-degree murder in the Worcester Superior Court and was again sentenced to life imprisonment.
Civil rights activism and focus on the LGBT community
Albert Toney III began educating and promoting equality for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community after retiring from the police force as a result of his injuries sustained in a shooting in 1991. He became involved with his future husband, Keith Fitzpatrick, in 1999. The pair were actively involved in the gay civil rights movement, becoming the faces of gay marriage in Massachusetts while educating people about the importance of recognizing gay and lesbian relationships and families. In 2004, they were featured in a documentary, "Same Sex America", that covered the contentious debate over same-sex marriage in Massachusetts. They were also featured in a televised public service announcement, "Its Wrong to Vote on Rights - The Toneys", regarding a proposed ballot initiative within the Massachusetts Legislature that involved gay marriage.Albert was appointed as co-vice-chair of the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination advisory board by Governor Deval Patrick on October 30, 2007.