Gay couple from Los Angeles, their children verbally assaulted by Amtrak passenger during ride

The couple says the passenger came up to their family and began screaming at their kids, referring to them as "pedophiles."

ByTim Johns KGO logo
Monday, April 18, 2022
Gay couple, their children verbally assaulted on CA Amtrak ride
A gay couple from Los Angeles say a fellow Amtrak passenger came up to their family and began screaming at the kids, calling the couple "pedophiles."

SAN FRANCISCO -- What was supposed to be a fun family trip, turned into a nightmare Tuesday afternoon for Robbie Pierce, his husband Neal and their children.

The couple was hours into an Amtrak train journey from Los Angeles to the Bay Area, when suddenly another passenger came up to the couple and began screaming at their children.

"The first thing he said was, 'Remember what I told you. Marriage is between a man and a woman, and these people stole you. They're not your parents, they're pedophiles,"' Pierce said.

The couple says they were both shocked and horrified.

Pierce's husband, Neal Broverman, immediately jumped up to separate the raging man from his kids.

"When you're a parent and your family or kids feel threatened, or you feel that they're threatened, you become kind of fearless," Broverman said.

Pasadena police investigating attack on 3 men after LGBTQ+ event as hate crime

Pasadena police are investigating an attack on three men who were leaving an LGBTQ+ event last week as a hate crime.

Unaware if the man had some type of weapon, Pierce says he took his children to a different train car.

The kids, he said, were visibly shaken.

"They were both just sobbing. Just tears all down their faces. And my son was kind of just frozen. My daughter was yelling, 'why is this happening?'" Pierce said.

When the train stopped in San Jose, Amtrak employees told the unidentified man that he had to leave. He refused the request until Santa Clara County Sheriff's deputies were called in for backup.

"He had been yelling, 'I'll die before I get off this train. You'll have to kill me to get me out of here,"' said Pierce.

The couple says while this isn't the first time they've experienced discrimination in public, this instance was the most extreme.

"These children have already had so much trauma. Like they've been through the foster system," Pierce said.

LA Pride parade to return in person, moving to Hollywood after 2-year COVID hiatus

The LA Pride Parade, which was on hiatus during the past two years due to the coronavirus pandemic, is returning this summer as an in-person event - this time in Hollywood.

But despite the attack, the couple says they're determined to keep living their lives as normal. Speaking out for those who can't always speak out for themselves.

"They want us to be afraid. And so, as scary as it is, we can't let that win. We're just not going to let them drive us out of the public discourse," said Pierce.

TAKE ACTION: Local resources for LGBTQ+ issues