This Gay Prison Gang, Called the ‘Rainbow Warriors,’ Fights Neo-Nazis Behind Bars

This Gay Prison Gang, Called the ‘Rainbow Warriors,’ Fights Neo-Nazis Behind Bars

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In a personal essay, Dennis Mintun — an inmate at the Idaho State Correctional Institution in Boise, Idaho — talks about how he became the head of his penitentiary’s gay prison gang. The gang is a group of queer inmates known as the “Rainbow Warriors,” and they prevent neo-Nazi inmates from beating up gay men and trans women during their initiations.

Mintun, himself a gay man serving a 45-year sentence for three counts of sexual abuse of a child under 16, says that his prison has a neo-Nazi gang called the Aryan Knights. To become a member of the Aryan Knights, new members have to beat up gay men or child molesters (called “chomos” in prison slang).

Smaller, weaker gay men and trans women tried to become Mintun’s “boyfriend” for protection. (Mintun weighs 310 pounds, “most of it muscle,” he says.) Feeling used yet craving real romantic companionship, Mintun began turning these “boyfriends” away, saying that their protection wasn’t his problem.

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Then he fell in love with an “adorable, “affectionate” young man named Peter who’d been accused (but not convicted) of child molestation. The other inmates considered him a chomo and threatened to beat him up if he didn’t hand over cash to use at the prison commissary.

Peter claimed he had genuine feelings for Mintun, but Mintun wasn’t sure whether to trust him. Once, while walking out to the prison recreation yard, Mintun saw several “gang bangers” asking Peter to come and talk to them in the bathroom. Peter asked Mintun to come with him. Mintun didn’t.

Later, Mintun learned that the men had beaten Peter until he fell and cracked his head, killing him almost instantly.

The Rainbow Warriors are a gay prison gang to protect gay and trans prisoners from being beaten up and killed

“I could have prevented it,” he continues, “I could have either gone with him, or taken him by the hand and insisted that he stay with us. … I just kept dwelling on the vision of that beautiful small boy lying dead — all because it had not been ‘my problem.’”

Mintun pledged never to let something like that happen again. “With the help of two friends,” he writes, “I began to gather many of the gay and transgender inmates in a gang of our own” with the goal of protecting other gay men and sex offenders from being beaten up by initiates into the Aryan Knights.

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“After a few of their initiations went south, they began jokingly calling us the ‘Rainbow Warriors,’” Mintun writes. He is now the head of the gay prison gang, stating, “When one person is persecuted or abused, and there is something I can do about it, especially if that person is my gay or trans brother or sister, it is my problem.”

According to a 2015 study on LGBTQ prisoners, LGBTQ prisoners are assaulted four times more often than other prisoners.

What do you think of the Rainbow Warriors, the gay prison gang?

This story was originally published on Sept. 9, 2018. It has since been updated.

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