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District of Columbia

Sentencing for Ruby Corado postponed

Former Casa Ruby director pleaded guilty to wire fraud

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Ruby Corado (Washington Blade file photo by Ernesto Valle)

The sentencing in D.C. federal court for Ruby Corado, the founder and executive director of the now-defunct LGBTQ community services organization Casa Ruby on a charge of wire fraud, has been postponed from Jan. 10 to March 28.

The postponement came just under six months after Corado pleaded guilty on July 17 to a single charge of wire fraud as part of a plea bargain deal offered by prosecutors.

Court records show that the judge presiding over the case on Dec. 24 approved a request by Coradoā€™s attorney for the postponement and that prosecutors with the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia supported the request.

The charge to which she pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia says she diverted at least $150,000 ā€œin taxpayer backed emergency COVID relief funds to private offshore bank accounts for her personal use,ā€ according to a statement released by the U.S. Attorneyā€™s office.

Under the federal wire fraud law, for which Corado is being prosecuted, she could be subjected to a possible maximum sentence of up to 20 years in prison, a fine up to $250,000, and restitution requiring her to repay the funds she stole.

Coradoā€™s guilty plea in July came a little over six weeks after prosecutors on May 31 filed a one-count criminal information charge of wire fraud against her that replaced an earlier criminal complaint charging her with bank fraud, money laundering, monetary transactions in criminally derived proceeds, and failure to file a required report of a foreign bank account.

The earlier complaint was filed at the time the FBI arrested Corado on March 5, 2024, at a hotel in Laurel, Md., shortly after she returned to the U.S. from El Salvador.

The initial complaint, like the second lesser complaint that replaced it, says the funds that Corado allegedly diverted to banks in El Salvador were intended for use by Casa Ruby to support indigent LGBTQ clients in need of housing and other support services.

A.J. Kramer, an attorney with the Federal Public Defender Service who is representing Corado, stated in a Dec. 23 motion filed in court that the sentencing postponement was needed to give the defense more time to respond to and obtain additional information regarding a Pre-Sentence Report that was issued on Dec. 11.

A statement on the U.S. District Courtā€™s website says Pre-Sentence Reports, which are prepared by the U.S. Probation Office based on court records and background information on a defendant, are used by judges to decide on a sentence, with the judge having the sole authority to determine a sentence.

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District of Columbia

D.C. police seek help in Dupont Circle murder probe

Records show victim was arrested three times for area assaults

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Dominique Ratiff was stabbed to death on Dec. 30. (Photo courtesy of the MPD)

D.C. police are seeking help from the public in their investigation into the Dec. 30 Dupont Circle stabbing death of a 36-year-old man who had been arrested at least three times between 2016 and 2023 for assault related incidents in the neighborhood, according to police and court records. 

A police announcement says D.C. police and U.S. Park Police officers responded at about 3:58 p.m. Monday, Dec. 30, 2024, to Dupont Circle for a report of a stabbing. It says an adult male later identified as Dominique Ratiff of  Southeast D.C. was found unresponsive suffering from a stab wound.

According to the statement, he was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead. Police said they have made no arrest in the case, but a police liaison officer told the Dupont Circle Advisory Neighborhood Commission that a suspect was described as a male wearing a purple beanie and baggy sweatpants leaving the scene on a bicycle on New Hampshire Avenue, N.W.

Police have said the stabbing occurred at the western side of Dupont Circle that intersects with Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. near the CVS Pharmacy and a PNC Bank.

Court records show that Ratiff was first arrested on June 2, 2016, on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon and simple assault for allegedly hitting a woman with his walking cane following a ā€œverbal altercationā€ in Dupont Circle.

D.C. Superior Court records show he was arrested again on June 15, 2016, for allegedly repeatedly punching a homeless man outside the manā€™s tent near 901 27th St., N.W., while wearing boxing gloves. That incident did not occur at Dupont Circle, but court records show prosecutors combined that case with the earlier assault case against the woman.

The records show both cases were dismissed by a judge after Ratiff complied with his pre-trial release requirements and successfully completed a ā€œmental healthā€ diversion program.

Records show Ratiffā€™s third arrest took place on April 16, 2022, when he was charged with Robbery Force and Violence, Theft Second-Degree, and Simple Assault for allegedly pushing a male victim against the wall outside of the CVS Pharmacy at Dupont Circle and taking money from the man after threatening to stab him.

Again, court records show all charges were dismissed against Ratiff after he complied with his pre-trial release requirements and successfully completed a court diversion program that included community service.

His fourth arrest occurred on July 18, 2023, court records show, when he was charged with Unlawful Entry-Private Property and Simple Assault for allegedly entering the CVS Pharmacy at Dupont Circle after having been barred from the premises one year earlier and assaulting a CVS manager who told him he had to leave.

The records show that a remote ā€œcitationā€ hearing was held on Aug. 9, 2023, which Ratiff attended with his attorney. According to the records, a judge ordered him to return to court on Sept. 20, 2023, for an arraignment and a judicial summons with the order was mailed to his address at 2863 Denver St., S.E.

The summons was returned as ā€œundeliverableā€ on Aug. 22, 2023, and Ratiff failed to appear at the Sept. 20 hearing, the records show, prompting the judge to issue a bench warrant for his arrest. But the records show no further action, such as an arrest, had taken place and authorities did not learn of Ratiffā€™s whereabouts until the time he was found fatally stabbed in Dupont Circle.

Gay Dupont Circle Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Vincent Slatt has called Ratiffā€™s murder a tragedy that possibly could have been prevented by better social services programs that Slatt said could have been arranged by the court system.

ā€œThis guy had gone through the system multiple times, and the social services have failed him,ā€ Slatt told the Washington Blade. ā€œAnd it resulted in him getting killed.ā€

Slatt added, ā€œSo, he was in several of these deferment programs. But ultimately, he still needed the social services, and it cost him his life,ā€ Slatt said. ā€œThis is an indication that we need to improve our social services. And these people are falling through the cracks.ā€

D.C. police are offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for Ratiffā€™s murder. Anyone with information that could help in the investigation is asked to call the police Homicide Branch at 202-645-9600.

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District of Columbia

Team Rayceen Productions goes on ā€˜indefiniteā€™ hiatus

Local LGBTQ advocacy groupā€™s co-founder resigns

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Activist Rayceen Pendarvis will remain active in the community but colleague Zar announced his resignation. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

Local community activist Zar, who founded the D.C. LGBTQ event and advocacy group Team Rayceen Productions in 2014 in collaboration with fellow activist Rayceen Pendarvis, announced he has resigned from his position as the groupā€™s creative director effective Jan. 14.

His announcement says since there is currently ā€œnobody who is willing, ready, or able to be my successor, I must also announce that the current Winter Hiatus of Team Rayceen Productions will continue indefinitely.ā€  

The announcement says Rayceen Pendarvis will remain active in the community and remain available to be booked as a host, emcee, panelist, and wedding officiant in the role Pendarvis has played in the D.C. community for many years. 

The primary motivation for his resignation at this time, Zar said in his announcement, is his deep concern about the problems he believes will surface during the incoming Trump administration.

ā€œI am all but certain that the next four years and beyond will be chaotic, and possibly dystopian or apocalyptic,ā€ he says in his announcement. ā€œThis is not the time for diplomacy, compromise, or capitulation,ā€ he continues. ā€œI understand that advocating for peaceful and nonviolent solutions is generally considered the only acceptable tactic; I am unwilling to abide.ā€

Out of deference to Pendarvis and others involved with Team Rayceen Productions, Zar said it would be unfair ā€œto allow my personal and political views to be conflated with those of anyone else,ā€ including those involved with Team Rayceen Productions.

ā€œThis requires my resignation,ā€ Zar wrote in his announcement. ā€œI am unwilling to be silent or censor myself.ā€

Zar said that while Team Rayceen Productionsā€™ operations are currently on hold, its online content will remain available, ā€œincluding over 900 videos created over the past five years for our YouTube channel and our Facebook live streams.ā€

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District of Columbia

25K people attend People’s March in D.C.

President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration is on Monday

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The People's March was held downtown Washington on Jan. 18, 2025. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Upwards of 25,000 people attended the People’s March that took place in D.C. on Saturday.

Participants ā€” who protested against President-elect Donald Trump’s proposals they say would target transgender people, immigrants, women, and other groups ā€” gathered at McPherson and Farragut Squares and Franklin Park before they joined the march that ended at the Lincoln Memorial.

The Gender Liberation Movement is among the groups that sponsored the march. Dozens of other People’s Marches took place in cities across the country on Saturday.

Trump’s inauguration will take place in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on Monday.

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key and Michael K. Lavers)

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