(Huffington Post) In the early hours of Aug. 17, Islan Nettles, a 21-year-old transgender woman, was beaten to death.
She was attacked across the street from New York City's Police Service
Area 6 precinct in Harlem, the life pummeled from her in a fit of
violence.
In the days that followed, the police arrested a suspect, 20-year-old Paris Wilson.
According
to reports, Wilson knocked Nettles to the ground and began beating her
with his fists as she lay helpless on the ground. Witnesses alleged that
Wilson's outburst began when he realized that Nettles was transgender,
and that he continued hitting her as he hurled transphobic and
homophobic slurs at her. The attack ultimately resulted in her death in
the hospital days later.
Wilson was charged with misdemeanor
assault. Many in the transgender community were outraged. How could such
a violent act be considered a misdemeanor?
Yesterday, even the
tiny bit of justice that would have come from a misdemeanor assault
conviction was taken from us. Judge Steven Statsinger announced that the
charges against Wilson would be dropped
as the prosecution didn't have clear evidence that Wilson was the man
who had committed the crime. Mind you, there were several witnesses at
the scene, with multiple people identifying Wilson as the perpetrator.
Still, this wasn't enough for Judge Statsinger and prosecutors.
After
his arrest, Wilson's mother sought out another man who had allegedly
committed the crime. This man offered a confession, though claiming that
he could not remember much detail of the incident, as he was supposedly
intoxicated at the time of the crime. This was enough to sway
prosecutors away from pursuing charges against Wilson, even though
police initially believed this man's confession to be false.
Too
often, this is what happens when someone dies at the hands of
anti-transgender violence. Victims are forgotten, perpetrators are let
free, and the world moves on as though nothing happened.
Today is
the 15th annual Transgender Day of Remembrance, a day when we can
reflect and memorialize those who were so unjustly taken from the world
for no reason other than being themselves. We look back on so many lives
cut so short.
What happened to Islan Nettles is neither unique
nor remarkable. What happened to her happens far more often to trans
women of color than we will ever truly know. The official body count
this year is 238, though that number is likely a gross underestimate.
There
are days to fight on other important transgender-specific issues like
housing discrimination, employment discrimination, harassment and media
representation. This is not that day. This is the day that we need to
look at the violence that so many of our trans sisters of color fall
victim to and ask, "What can we do to stop this?"
I wish I had an
answer to that. I wish there was something I could say or do to protect
the lives of victims past, present and future, but I find myself lost
and near speechless. No one should die because of who they are, ever. Read more Hate
No comments:
Post a Comment