We are lucky to have Jerry Brown for our leader in California.....Good job Governor Jerry Brown
 California governor OKs ban on gay conversion therapy, calling it 'quackery'
By Josh Levs, CNN
updated 6:44 PM EDT, Mon October 1, 2012
 
Therapist to challenge 'gay cure' ban
 
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Two groups say they're filing lawsuits challenging the newly signed California law
- NEW: A "reparative therapist" calls the law "the height of ... irresponsibility"
- The law will prohibit sexual orientation change therapy for children under age 18 
- A psychiatric group says the therapy can bring on depression and self-destructive behavior 
 
 
(CNN) -- Therapy aimed at turning gay kids straight 
will soon be illegal in California, with the state's governor declaring 
he hopes a new law will relegate such efforts "to the dustbin of 
quackery."
The legislation -- which the state Senate 
passed
 in May, Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law this weekend and will take 
effect January 1 -- prohibits attempts to change the sexual orientation 
of patients under age 18.
"This bill bans 
non-scientific 'therapies' that have driven young people to depression 
and suicide," Brown tweeted. "These practices have no basis in science 
or medicine."
But practitioners of 
so-called "reparative therapy" say the assertions of the governor and 
gay rights advocates "just are not true," according to David Pickup, a 
spokesman for the National Association for Research and Therapy of 
Homosexuality.
 Therapy claims to change homosexuals
Therapy claims to change homosexuals
 
Joined by "individual 
therapists and individual minor clients," his group will file a "major 
lawsuit" this week to challenge the law," Pickup said. The Pacific 
Justice Institute separately told CNN it will file its own lawsuit 
Monday, alleging the law violates the First Amendment.
"We do competent therapy,
 therapy that truly works," Pickup, who himself underwent such therapy 
and now administers it to others, said Monday on CNN.
"For them to have a bill 
that says, 'No, we can't even talk about these issues, we can't do 
anything to help these children resolve their homosexual feelings and 
maximize their heterosexual potential' -- that's the height of political
 and therapeutic irresponsibility."
Pickup alluded to a 
report by the American Psychiatric Association that, he says, doesn't 
find any "proof that (the therapy) causes harm."
But the psychiatric 
organization -- which is the world's largest of its kind, with more than
 36,000 members -- determined, in fact, that reparative therapy poses a 
great risk, including increasing the likelihood or severity of depression,
 anxiety and self-destructive behavior for those undergoing therapy. 
Therapists' alignment with societal prejudices against homosexuality may
 reinforce self-hatred already felt by patients, the association says.
"The longstanding 
consensus of the behavioral and social sciences and the health and 
mental health professions is that homosexuality per se is a normal and 
positive variation of human sexual orientation," the association says.
After the bill passed 
the state Senate, Equality California spokeswoman Rebekah Orr praised 
the "right first step in making sure that young people are protected 
from these unscrupulous therapists who are really engaging in 
therapeutic deception that is based on junk science."
"This law will ensure 
that state-licensed therapists can no longer abuse their power to harm 
LGBT youth and propagate the dangerous and deadly lie that sexual 
orientation is an illness or disorder that can be 'cured,'" said Orr's 
organization, which describes itself as the largest statewide advocacy 
group in California working for "full equality" for lesbian, gay, 
bisexual, and transgender people.
Peter Drake, who once 
participated in reparative therapy, said the bill protects youths from 
"a very, very dangerous therapy that doesn't work and leaves a lot of 
people feeling despair and hopelessness."
Yet Pickup insists that 
the "children who walk into my office ... crying, depressed, lonely, 
gender-identity confused and sexually confused" ask for help 
voluntarily, because they are "distressed."
Thousands believe, he 
claims, "believe there's a cause-and-effect nature of homosexuality" 
that can be brought about by instances of abuse and issues like "gender 
identity inferiority," "un-met needs from ... usually the same-sex 
parent" and other "inner wounds that we discover in therapy."
"When those wounds get 
healed, the homosexual feelings -- we don't force them away, they 
naturally, spontaneously dissipate," said Pickup, who credits the 
therapy with having "helped save my life," by decreasing his depression 
and raising his self-esteem.
The debate could now 
move to court, thanks to promised lawsuits by Pickup's group and the 
Pacific Justice Institute that describes itself as a network of more 
than 1,000 attorneys "defending religious, parental, and other 
constitutional rights."
"Of all the 
freedom-killing bills we have seen in our legislature the last several 
years, this is among the worst," said Brad Dacus, the institute's 
president and founder, in a written statement.
The legal battle could 
center around the questions of whether such therapy constitutes child 
abuse and if a ban is unconstitutional.
Ryan Kendall, who went 
through this type of therapy when he was 13, told CNN it began after his
 mother read his diary and discovered he was gay. In the therapy, he was
 consistently told his sexuality was a choice and could "be fixed," he 
said.
"I never believed that. I
 know I'm gay just like I know I'm short and I'm half Hispanic. I've 
never thought that those facts would change. It's part of my core 
fundamental identity. So the parallel would be sending me to tall camp 
and saying, 'If you try very hard, one day you can be 6-foot-1.'"
Kendall said 
psychologist Joseph Nicolosi treated him. His parents provided CNN with 
copies of bills from Nicolosi's office, but Nicolosi said he did not 
remember treating someone by that name.
He told CNN he views the therapy he provides as "trying to bring out the heterosexuality" in someone.
Yet Nicolosi insisted the therapy is not harmful, and he treats only people who want to change.
A leading psychologist 
in the field of reparative therapy, George Rekers, treated a boy named 
Kirk Murphy, whose story was told in 
a 2011 CNN report.
 Rekers considered Kirk a success story, writing that "his feminine 
behavior was gone" -- proof, Rekers said, that homosexuality can be 
prevented.
But Murphy's family said he never stopped being gay. He hanged himself at the age of 38. Despite 
allegations
 by the family that Rekers' therapy decades earlier ultimately led to 
the suicide , Rekers told CNN that scientifically, it "would be 
inaccurate to assume that it was the therapy," and that he grieves for 
the parents.
"Two independent psychologists with me had evaluated him and said he was better adjusted after treatment," Rekers said.
"I only meant to help, do the best I could with the parents," he added.
Rekers' days as a prominent anti-gay champion came to an end after he 
hired
 a male escort to accompany him on a trip to Europe. He denied any 
sexual contact or awareness at the time that the escort offered sexual 
favors.
Earlier this year, psychiatrist Robert L. Spitzer 
apologized
 for his 2003 study of reparative therapy, which suggested that it could
 help gays and lesbians become straight. He said it was deeply flawed.
"I believe I owe the gay
 community an apology for my study making unproven claims of the 
efficacy of reparative therapy," Spitzer said in a letter to the editor 
of the Archives of Sexual Behavior. "I also apologize to any gay person 
who wasted time and energy undergoing some form of reparative therapy 
because they believed that I had proven that reparative therapy works 
with some 'highly motivated' individuals."
Kendall said the therapy
 he underwent "led me to periods of homelessness, to drug abuse, to 
spending a decade of my life wanting to kill myself. It led to so much 
pain and struggle. And I want them to know that what they do hurts 
people.
"It hurts children. It has no basis in fact. And they need to stop."
CNN's Nicole File, Tom Watkins, Randi Kaye, Scott Bronstein and Jessi Joseph contributed to this report.