I'm leaning towards Farren was harmed or if he lived through 1980, he maybe died of Aids later on. I don't believe he is an UID entered in Namus at this point. At least not in SF. Personally I don't believe every found UID, especially the older cases, are entered in Namus. He might have been buried N.N. in a mass grave or cremated. I'm not sure about the policy in SF, but in Los Angeles this was customary.
It were hard times for the gay community in those days.
Cleve Jones reflects on life in San Francisco during the 1980s AIDS crisis
SAN FRANCISO (KTVU) - The AIDS crisis swept through United States in the early 1980s. But the epicenter of that deadly epidemic was San Francisco.
Cleve Jones was there at the beginning when a mysterious and merciless virus began ripping through the heart of San Francisco's gay community.
"It was a time of great sorrow and overwhelming terror. It was not unusual to see people in this neighborhood collapse and die in the street," said Jones who became an AIDS activist.
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UC San Francisco oncologist Paul Volberding is one of the pioneers of AIDS research.
He saw his first AIDS patient in 1981.
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The disease would eventually kill 20,000 people in San Francisco alone. Most of them were gay men. It was commonly spread through sexual contact.
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With AIDS came fear. Straight people wondered about sitting on buses next to a gay person. 'What if he sneezes?'
This is what happened when an a person with AIDS once came to San Francisco TV station for an interview: "The sound guy wouldn't mic the patient because he was concerned about coming too close to an AIDS patient," said Volberding.
AIDS also brought out homophobia.
"There were bumper stickers that said AIDS is killing all the right people," said Jones.
etc.