Transgender local attorney becomes a judge
HOUSTON
Frye, a transgender Houston attorney born as Phillip Frye,
fought back tears last week as the mayor appointed her to a
municipal bench in the same room where she helped repeal Houston's
"cross-dressing ordinance" in 1980.
"I almost started crying, because I remembered 31 years ago, in
that very same chamber, I was subject to arrest," Frye said.
The 63-year-old will hear traffic ticket cases and other
low-level misdemeanor trials. Municipal judges are not elected, she
noted.
Frye said she would be the first transgender judge in Texas. She
knows of at least two transgender judges in other parts of the
country.
Frye applied for the position several months ago and was vetted
before being appointed by Mayor Annise Parker on Wednesday with
seven other new associate judges.
"I think she's a great addition to our judiciary," the mayor
said. "I'm very proud I was able to nominate her, and she agreed
to serve."
Frye joins 43 other associate municipal judges and 22 full-time
municipal judges.
"I don't want to underplay this, because I understand it is
very significant," Frye said. "But I don't want to overplay it
either. I don't want people to think I am anything other than an
associate municipal court judge."
Three decades ago Frye volunteered at City Hall where she worked
to repeal an ordinance that allowed police to arrest men in women's
clothes and lesbians wearing fly-front jeans.
"Things have changed, and it's pretty wonderful," Frye said.
A graduate of Texas A&M, Frye was an Eagle Scout and an Aggie
cadet. She also was a husband and a father.
Frye has practiced criminal defense law in Houston since 1986.
She now heads a six-lawyer firm and has parlayed her expertise
in gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender legal issues into a
storied legal career -- the latest chapter of which is her
representation of Nikki Araguz, the transgender Wharton widow
embroiled in a legal battle to receive part of her firefighter
husband's death benefits.
Parker's critics seized on Frye's appointment to say the mayor,
who is a lesbian, is promoting a gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender agenda.
"Phyllis Frye is a very well-known radical transgender
activist," said Dave Welch, executive director of the Houston Area
Pastor Council, which represents about 300 churches.
"We don't think it is consistent with the values of the vast
majority of the people," Welch said. "We think it is an
anti-family lifestyle and agenda."
Her appointment, however, was applauded by Houston's GLBT
Political Caucus.
"Phyllis Frye is a true icon in our civil rights movement,"
said Kris Banks, Caucus president. "She is an internationally
recognized pioneer, and the mayor is to be congratulated for her
choice."
Banks noted that Charles Spain, an openly gay attorney and chair
of the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identification Issues of the
State Bar, also was appointed as an associate municipal court
judge. Josh Brockman, an openly gay attorney, was appointed as a
hearings officer to resolve contested parking tickets.
New judges go through hours of state-mandated training. Frye
said she expects to begin substituting for sitting judges in the
spring.