Houston civil rights activist Ray Hill died of heart failure at the Omega House Hospice recently surrounded by family. He was 78.
Hill never shied away from a fight. He was willing to spar with critics and allies alike when he felt an injustice needed righting. A staunch defender of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender rights as well as a prison reform activist, Hill told KPRC Thursday that his life was guided by one simple principle:
โGet up every morning and do whatโs right,โ Hill said.
Hill, one of the founders of what was then called the Houston Gay Political Caucus, fought for equality and free speech.
In recent years, Hill fought to win parole for convicted killer Jon Buice, a reversal from the early โ90s, when Hill pushed for the maximum punishment. Buice was one of several who pleaded guilty to killing Paul Broussard outside a Montrose nightclub. Police determined Broussardโs murder was a gay-bashing incident, and Buice got the harshest sentence because he delivered the fatal stab wound.
โI got it wrong, pure and simple,โ Hill said.
Years later, Hill came to believe Broussardโs murder had nothing to do with his sexual orientation and that Buice, who was a teen at the time, was genuinely remorseful for what happened that night. This put him at odds with victimsโ rights advocates, but Hill remained undeterred and advocated for Buiceโs parole.
โYou can make mistakes, but youโve got to clean up after yourself,โ Hill told KPRC.
Former Houston Mayor Annise Parker said Hillโs fight for equality has made him an icon in the LBGTQ community.
โRayโs always had a really clear sense of right and wrong,โ Parker told KPRC.
She said his sense of right and wrong made Hill unafraid to remain true to his convictions, even when they clashed with those of his colleagues.
โFor a long time, he gave out a business card that said โpesky, contemptuous, troublemakerโ and โafflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted,’โ Parker said.
Hill also disproved the adage, โYou canโt fight City Hall.โ Hill went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court to see an old city ordinance struck down. That ordinance made it illegal to even argue with a police officer while they were doing their job. That fight stemmed from Hill intervening on behalf of a friend he felt was being unfairly questioned by police.
โThere are very few people who can say they had a case that went all the way to the Supreme Court and fundamentally changed how people interact with the police department,โ Parker said.
While his health was failing, Hill told KPRC he took comfort in knowing he always stayed true to his convictions.
โI tried to always do what was right,โ he said.
Hill told KPRC he would like his funeral to be held on the steps of City Hall, the same spot where he fought so many battles over the decades.
Mayor Sylvester Turner released the following statement:
โRay Hill, my friend and warrior, has passed. Fighting for gay rights, human rights, criminal justice reforms, Ray was on the front line and helped pave the way for many others to follow. He was authentic, committed and respected.
โLast week, when Ray Hill posted on Facebook that his heart capacity was at 10 percent, many of his friends had the same retort: At 10 percent, Rayโs heart was still bigger and stronger than most other peopleโs at 100 percent. Itโs true. Ray had a heart for justice, equality and acceptance for decades, and he followed his heart into the streets, courtrooms, city council chambers, legislative hearing rooms, jails, prisons and radio stations of our city and state, advocating for his causes well before they became popular. Iโm one of many people who agreed with him about his important causes now. But such positions are relatively easy to take and express now that Ray has blazed the trail. Rest in peace Ray Hill.โ


