Here's How the Feds Can Fight Trans Murders

Here's How the Feds Can Fight Trans Murders

Last Thursday morning, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi grieved the loss of at least 21 transgender women murdered in the U.S. this year as a result of anti-trans bias. 

“We can pass a law, we can help to break down barriers in people’s minds,” said Pelosi at her morning press briefing, according to the Washington Blade. “Now we have to get to their hearts.” 

Her remarks come on the heels of Sen. Al Franken’s letter the previous day to the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, urging an end to law enforcement’s frequent misgendering of trans murder victims, and an increase in the reporting and tracking of hate crimes against gender-variant people. 

The White House also weighed in at an afternoon press conference Thursday. Deputy White House press secretary Eric Schultz offered “thoughts and prayers” for the victims and their families, adding that the White House has no new “legislative or official reviews” on the matter. But, “obviously the president’s record on this is well known,” concluded Schultz. 

So now that top officials of the federal government are addressing what advocates are calling an epidemic of transgender murders, beyond prayers and existing legislative measures, what can they do?

Drawing from the valiant efforts of advocates, outreach specialists, policymakers, and government officials, here are two steps that Congress and the White House can take to fight deadly violence against transgender people in the United States. 

1. Increase and improve the tracking and reporting of hate crimes based on gender identity.

In his letter, Sen. Franken noted that the current federal Hate Crimes Prevention Act does not specifically require state or local law enforcement to report such incidents. Consequently, underreporting of hate crimes is a widespread problem.
 
Franken was not the only federal official to acknowledge the woeful state of the tracking and reporting of hate crimes. The FBI director himself, James B. Comey, also highlighted the problem in a statement to the House Judiciary Committee Thursday.

In his statement, Comey stressed the importance of reporting bias-motivated attacks:

“We need to do a better job of tracking and reporting hate crime and ‘color of law’ violations to fully understand what is happening in our communities and how to stop it. … There are jurisdictions that fail to report hate crime statistics. Others claim there were no hate crimes in their community — a fact that would be welcome if true. We must continue to impress upon our state and local counterparts in every jurisdiction the need to track and report hate crime and to do so accurately. It is not something we can ignore or sweep under the rug.”

But in response to a question about tracking police shootings, Comey told The Huffington Post earlier this month, “I don’t have the power to require people to supply us with data.” He can only tell local law enforcement that it is “in everyone’s interest” to collect data, he explained.

Likewise, U.S. Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch also said that requiring local jurisdictions to collect data may not be something that the federal government believes is feasible.

“One of the things we are focusing on at the Department of Justice is not trying to reach down from Washington and dictate to every local department how they should handle the minutia of record-keeping, but we are stressing to them that these records must be kept,” Lynch said during the Washington Ideas Forum, hosted by AtlanticLIVE and the Aspen Institute October 1, according to News One

Rather than speaking about trans murders specifically, Lynch was discussing the reporting of police shootings. She cited budgetary constraints and limited resources within local law enforcement departments as the reason why data collection is hampered. Lynch’s remarks reveal a criminal justice culture where systemic issues of resources and funding contribute to widespread problems of poor tracking and underreporting.

Of course, police shootings and trans murders are different in most cases. But underlying both is a criminal justice culture that underreports or fails to collect and track data. And in both police shootings and trans murders, the victims are overwhelmingly people of color.

While police are investigating the possibility that the homicides of Zella Ziona and Kiesha Jenkins were hate crimes, no official determination has been made. Further, it’s unclear to what extent local law enforcement has used federal hate-crime legislation to charge and convict suspects in the cases of the other 19 trans women killed in the U.S. this year.

Imagine if local jurisdictions were required by federal agencies to not only report and track anti-trans violence — not just murders, but the assaults and harassment — but also to proactively use hate-crime legislation in prosecutions where clear evidence from suspects or witnesses points to transphobia as a motive for the crime.

There is little doubt that gender identity played a role in the most recent trans murders. Ziona’s alleged killer, Rico Leblond, is under investigation for killing the woman he allegedly knew, after telling police that she “embarrassed” him by speaking to him after his friends learned that Ziona was a trans woman

2. Expand support for research, outreach, education, and advocacy.

One day after Pelosi discussed the trans murders at her weekly briefing, the Philadelphia Daily News released an in-depth investigation into the world that Kiesha Jenkins lived as an alleged sex worker in Philadelphia. The report — and years of outreach efforts by advocates who support sex workers — provides a reality check about the enormous need for economic justice in the lives of low-to-no-income trans people of color who turn to sex work to survive. 

Certainly, not all murdered trans individuals engaged in sex work. But many did, to survive arduous living conditions exacerbated by the compounding oppressions of race, socio-economic class, and gender. Moreover, while they may not have engaged in sex work, many of the reported trans murder victims this year were low-income individuals who struggled to make ends meet.

Although it won’t stop trans murders immediately, the federal Equality Act is needed because shockingly high numbers of trans individuals face hostile working conditions and pervasive unemployment when they are their true selves. The National Transgender Discrimination Survey showed that 26 percent of trans people had lost a job due to bigotry. 

That lack of economic stability leads many individuals who are most at-risk to turn to sex work, where they face persistent danger and hateful acts of continual harm — and not just murder: maiming, rape, and theft. Without a job free from hostilities, many of the most at-risk trans individuals turn to sex work for money. Others abuse drugs to ameliorate suffering, developing debilitating addictions. 

“Because these trans women are engaging in sex work, when they’re robbed, assaulted or raped, they don’t report it to police; they don’t want to be criminalized,” Naiymah Sanchez told the Philadelphia Daily News. Sanchez is the coordinator of the TransHealth Information Project at GALAEI, a gay Latino social justice organization in North Philly that performs outreach to those most at-risk. “The things that get reported are murders, because they have to be reported,” observed Sanchez.

Researching at-risk trans lives, beyond the statistics and beyond the specifics of the crimes against them, will help reveal the obstacles that place so many in danger. Even as the public learns more about anti-trans violence, many Americans may not truly encounter the narratives of those individuals most affected. Even when the average American does encounter these narratives, it is crucial to understand them through the lens of economic justice, which strives to look at the intersecting factors contributing to one’s situation, rather than blaming the victims or ignoring the realities of low-income trans people who fight everyday to survive, let alone thrive.

Getting these narratives out into the public sphere so that they inform public policy takes a greater degree of attention on the part of government officials. At the same time, expanding this understanding of trans lives must also strike a balance between recognizing the harsh reality of many trans people’s living conditions, but never reducing trans lives solely to illicit practices.

Increasing this support will require a new level of innovative fiscal aid that builds on existing governmental efforts. Of course, given the ongoing anti-trans positions of some members of Congress, increasing such support will be challenging.

As such, meaningful support of trans lives also requires active, ongoing guidance for organizations and advocacy groups. Local trans groups serving hard-hit communities, like GALAEI, must not be forgotten — by contrast, they should be lifted up and supported. 

Likewise, The Trans Justice Funding Project is a community-led funding initiative founded in 2012 that provides mentorship and annual funds to people fighting the issues that affect trans lives like racism, economic injustice, transmisogyny, ableism, immigration, and incarceration. Another effort is the Trans-Latina Worker Cooperative, which is combating trans underemployment by helping trans Latinas pool resources to start collectively run beauty salons.

Still another effort is Someone Cares in Atlanta, the largest trans outreach organization in the Southeastern United States.

Expanding federal funding and mentorship for advocates who study and help at-risk trans individuals will go a long way to combating the systemic problems that play a major role in anti-trans violence. 

Start With Baby Steps

These steps are meant to be taken in tandem with existing federal anti-discrimination efforts, like the Obama Administration’s game-changing new trans health care policies, and the hopeful passage of the federal Equality Act, which Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, praises as a first-rate legislative measure to combat anti-LGBT discrimination in its myriad forms. 

Needless to say, these two steps are by no means comprehensive. Rather, they expose enormous work ahead and point to the future. Moreover, a few local jurisdictions, like Washington, D.C., have enacted strong local measures as an effort to intervene in anti-trans violence. But, as The Advocate previously reported, while the nation’s capital  is hailed as having some of the best antidiscrimination policies in place for trans people, it also has one of the highest rates of anti-transgender crime.

These recommendations are controversial. It is estimated that 0.3 percent of Americans are trans — just around 700,000 people — and despite increased visibility and legal protections, confusion and hostility still reign about the identities and welfare of one of the nation’s smallest minorities. 

Furthermore, like most of this year’s murder victims, Ziona and Jenkins — both killed in October — were trans women of color. Considering the recommendations here demands intersectional thinking: recognizing the connections between anti-trans violence, economic struggle, and racially motivated bias in a multifaceted fight to lift up low-to-no-income trans people of color, who are often hit hardest by anti-trans violence as it intersects with their class and race. 

November 20 marks the annual international Transgender Day of Remembrance, where trans groups across the country will hold candlelight vigils and read out the names of the deceased. But this year, advocates in multiple American cities are taking to the streets too. The National Trans March of Resilience network seeks to coordinate multi-city protests and draw increased attention to all forms of anti-trans hostilities.

Along with the vigils and the marches, now is the time for high-level action — the kind that the federal government is uniquely poised to do.

CLEIS ABENI is a writer for The Advocate. Follow her on Twitter @CleisAbeni.

Cleis Abeni

www.advocate.com/commentary/2015/10/27/heres-how-feds-can-fight-trans-murders

Testicular Cancer Is Finally Something To Laugh About

Testicular Cancer Is Finally Something To Laugh About

unnamed-1Balls, nuts, gonads, cojones, the family jewels… testicles. What would you do without them? That hypothetical question became a reality for writer and actor Byron Lane after receiving a testicular cancer prognosis.

Confronted with the prospect of loosing his luscious full head of hair due to chemotherapy treatments, Lane decided to make a web series about the surgical experience before his hair fell out. Last Will and Testicle is a six-episode comedy web series written, directed and starring Lane as Will.

The series follows Will as he goes through each stage of grief (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance) and how it affects the people in his life. Will’s boyfriend, family, and co-workers hilariously manage to say all the wrong things.

Will: I found a lump on the testicle.
Dad: This was caused by all that gay stuff.
Will’s boyfriend: Eww, that was in mouth.
To make matters worse Will’s nightmares consist of a life size, talking version of his testicle and the cancerous lump that berates him.
Will: Who are you? The lump on my testicle?
Cancerous Lump: No, I’m the lump on your elbow. Fuck you, of course I’m the lump on you testicle!

Last Will and Testicle also stars gay film-fan favorites Sam Pancake (Where the Bears Are, Pretty the Series) as Will’s surgeon, Jonathan Van Ness (Gay of Thrones) as Will’s testicle and Drew Droege (You’re Killing Me) as the cancerous lump. Character actress and comedy queen, Beth Grant (The Mindy Project, Sordid Lives) plays Will’s mother.

unnamedA kickstarter campaign was recently launched to help fund the first season and postproduction costs. In less than two weeks they were able to exceed their goal of $5000. Due to the overwhelming response and donations a second season is already in the works.

In season two, Will finds out the lump was cancer and now he has tough choices to make about his treatment. He also has to cope with the reality that even though he had a testicle removed, there’s always the chance the cancer will return. He questions whether he is living life to the fullest.

Lane is no stranger to offbeat and subversively hilarious content. He previously parlayed his web series, Herpes Boy about a misanthropic, wanna-be youtube star with an unfortunate birthmark, into the award-winning feature film starring Beth Grant and Oscar-winner Octavia Spencer.

Check out the trailer for the series and donate to the Kickstarter campaign here.

Jeremy Kinser

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Oh Hell No! David Mixner to Perform One-Man Show in Atlanta This Thursday

Oh Hell No! David Mixner to Perform One-Man Show in Atlanta This Thursday

mixner

LGBT and civil rights activist, author, storyteller, and Towleroad contributor David Mixner brings his one-night only one-man show to the Hill Auditorium at The Woodruff Arts Center in Atlanta this October 29 at 7 pm  to benefit The Point Foundation, an organization which assists LGBTQ students in achieving their academic and leadership potential.

Mixner’s new show, Oh Hell No!, is a night of engaging, often humorous storytelling and occasionally shocking remembrances from career activist and political firebrand Mixner (also a friend and a contributor to this site) He’ll be accompanied musically by Chris Bolan, Ryan Silverman, and country music star Chely Wright. It’s a must-see, and a show you Atlantans don’t want to miss!

For information on tickets, including VIP seating with admittance to the post-performance after party, click HERE.

DON’T MISS: David Mixner on Activism, History, and His One-Man Sold-Out NYC Show ‘Oh Hell No’: INTERVIEW

The post Oh Hell No! David Mixner to Perform One-Man Show in Atlanta This Thursday appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Oh Hell No! David Mixner to Perform One-Man Show in Atlanta This Thursday

REPORT: Homeschool Program Used by Duggars Sued for Child Sex Abuse

REPORT: Homeschool Program Used by Duggars Sued for Child Sex Abuse

The Institute in Basic Life Principles — an Illinois-based Christian “training” institution connected to the famously antigay 19 Kids and Counting family, the Duggars — is the target of a lawsuit by five women who claim the homeschooling organization and its board of directors covered up the sexual abuse and harassment of interns, employees, and children in its care, reports The Washington Post. 

Gretchen Wilkinson, Charis Barker, Rachel Frost, Rachel Lees and a woman identified only as Jane Doe are seeking $50,000 in damages, reported the Post, alleging negligence as well as accusing the board of conspiring to keep the alleged abuse secret. 

The suit claims employees and directors “frequently received reports” of “sexual abuse, sexual harassment and inappropriate/unauthorized touching”  but never reported “these serious, potentially criminal allegations to law enforcement authorities or the Illinois Department of Children & Family Services,” as required by law, the Post reports. The suit was filed last week in DuPage County Circuit Court in Wheaton, Ill. 

Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, the parents of the 19 Kids and Counting family, have long been affiliated with the organization’s homeschooling arm, the Advanced Training Institute. Earlier this year it was reported that they sent eldest son Josh Duggar to an IBLP training center as a teenager after he admitted to sexually abusing four of his younger sisters and a family friend.

IBLP founder and former director Bill Gothard, who was placed on “indefinite administrative leave” last year after being accused of sexually harassing and abusing employees, was not named in the lawsuit as he is no longer with the institute, the Post reports. 

However, David Gibbs III, attorney for the plaintiffs, told the Post that many women said Gothard had touched them inappropriately when they were teens in institute programs — some were as young as 13 or 14 at the time. Since filing the suit, Gibbs said, other families have contacted him with more tales of abuse. 

While the Duggars’ reality program has been canceled, the institute remains in the public eye, as one of its directors, Gil Bates, has a reality show about his family, Bringing Up Bates. There are 19 children in the family, just as in the Duggar clan. 

 

Dawn Ennis

www.advocate.com/families/2015/10/27/report-homeschool-program-used-duggars-sued-child-sex-abuse

This Comic Perfectly Captures What Life Is Like After A Breakup

This Comic Perfectly Captures What Life Is Like After A Breakup

When his relationship ended after two years in 2014, Brandon Sheffield felt like there was a “very specific person-sized hole” in his life. 

To cheer himself up, the Oakland, California-based video game director started writing little vignettes about his experiences, documenting everything from how awkward he felt going out sans-girlfriend to how depressing it was to crawl into bed alone.

“I noticed there were certain patterns to the way I felt and sort of rolled around through my days,” Sheffield told HuffPost. “But I also realized that even though my emotional wounds were specific to me, the way I was acting was very similar to what I’d seen friends go through.” 

Realizing how universal his routine was, Sheffield asked his friend, New York-based illustrator Dami Lee, to turn the stories into comic strips — a project they’d eventually call No Girlfriend Comics.

“She added bits of herself here and there, which I think made the comic more relatable and not just for dudes,” Sheffield said of his collaboration with Lee, who was living in Seoul, Korea at the time. 

(Story continues after the comic.) 

The sweetly relatable comics — which ran on the site Tapastic from early August to December 2014 — touched a nerve with readers, so much so that when Sheffield and Lee wrapped up the series after 20 installments, their audience wanted more. 

“People complained when the series ended because they really wanted Brandon (the character) to stay miserable!” Lee told HuffPost,”But it felt right to end it at 20 comics instead of continuing the series; it represented a passing phase that everyone goes through at some point. The comic came to its natural end, just like a lot of relationships.” 

See some of our favorite installments below, then head to Tapastic to read the comic series in its entirety.  

 

 More From HuffPost:  

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Open Question: Can a girl ask another girl to sadies?

Open Question: Can a girl ask another girl to sadies?
I’m bi and there’s this girl I like. I know sadies is when girls ask guys, typically, but is it okay for a girl to ask a girl? Not too many people know I’m bi and I just started actively coming out. I’m not sure of her orientation, either. So, the chances of me actually asking is low. However, I’d still like to know if it’s okay. My school is okay with lgbt+ too.

answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20151027154443AA8eIh4

Watch: Houston Business Leaders Call for Yes on Proposition 1

Watch: Houston Business Leaders Call for Yes on Proposition 1

This week, in a video calling for residents to support HERO with a “yes” vote on Proposition One, Welcome Wilson Sr., a longtime Houston developer, recounts the business community’s proud history of addressing the city’s challenges.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/watch-houston-business-leaders-call-for-yes-on-proposition-1?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

PHOTOS: “Looking” Cast Reunites To Bring Us All Some Closure

PHOTOS: “Looking” Cast Reunites To Bring Us All Some Closure

All great things must end, so it is with much admiration that we anticipate the wrap-up of HBO’s endlessly-provocative dramedy Looking. The cast (Jonathan Groff, Raul Castillo, Frankie J. Alvarez, Murray Bartlett, Daniel Franzese and Lauren Weedman) minus Russell Tovey, who is expected to appear in it but is in Manhattan starring the Broadway revival of All My Sons, are all in San Francisco prepping to reprise their roles. A little birdie-in-the-know told Queerty to expect a two-hour send off during the early months of next year. We know nothing about the plot but it’s fair to surmise we’ll learn if Patrick (Groff) chooses Kevin (Tovey) or Richie (Castillo). Maybe he’ll choose both. This is HBO and it’s 2015, after all.

Scroll down to see some of the photos posted by cast and crew to whet our appetite for what’s to come.

A few weeks ago Russell posted a pic of the front page of the script.

Who’s ready for this magic eh? @lookinghbo #lookinghbo 🙂

A photo posted by Russelltovey (@russelltovey) on

Followed by a pic with Groff feigning shock at the frank memoir of vintage thespian Elizabeth Ashley.

The reunion is this way.

??? @lookinghbo

A photo posted by Daniel Franzese (@whatsupdanny) on

Eddie and Agustin are reunited…and, yes, it feels so good.

Look!! It’s #agusteddie !!! @lookinghbo A photo posted by Daniel Franzese (@whatsupdanny) on

Patrick likes throuples.

Will you look at these cuties?! So glad to see my pals!

A photo posted by Daniel Franzese (@whatsupdanny) on

And frouples.

The whole team.

The table read. @lookinghbo (miss you guys who couldn’t make it!) @boredchair @russelltovey

A photo posted by Daniel Franzese (@whatsupdanny) on

The table read.

The beginning of the end… Final read through for the @lookinghbo crew. Love these guys! Can’t stress that enough #repost @michaellannan with @repostapp. ??? #readthrough

A photo posted by Raúl Castillo (@officialraulcastillo) on

And again in classic black-and-white.

Another one from yesterday’s read. #Repost @goldiegoldberg with @repostapp. ??? Final table read ??

A photo posted by Raúl Castillo (@officialraulcastillo) on

Raul is always giving good shade.

Jeremy Kinser

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News: Channing Tatum, Cave Lion Cubs, Debt Ceiling Filibuster, San Francisco, King Cobra

News: Channing Tatum, Cave Lion Cubs, Debt Ceiling Filibuster, San Francisco, King Cobra

HALLOWEEN: Bette Midler says Hocus Pocus sequel has been delayed: “@Disney having trouble finding a virgin!”

LIP SYNC FOR YOUR LIFE: Queen Bey and Magic Mike are set to hit the Lip Sync Battle stage: “According to Entertainment WeeklyBeyoncé is scheduled to go up against Channing Tatum. However, some people are saying the two will be on the same team!”

MOVIES: Neighbors 2 has started filming, and Zac Efron looks as fit as ever.

POLE: Demi Lovato got upstaged by a well-endowed dancer performing at gay club in NYC.

CSWonZWWsAAq9WVPOLICE STATE: Sheriff Leon Lott weighs in on viral video showing his brutally assault a black teenage student: “When asked by a reporter if race was a factor in the arrest by Fields, who is white, of the student, who is Black, Lott responded, ‘I don’t know… this deputy has been dating an African American female for some time.’”

NATURE: 10,000 year old cave lion cubs found almost perfectly preserved in Siberia: “The cave lions – Panthera spelaea (Goldfuss) – lived during Middle and Late Pleistocene times on the Eurasian continent, from the British Isles to Chukotka in the extreme east of Russia, and they also roamed Alaska and northwestern Canada. The extinct creatures were close relatives of modern Afro-Asiatic lion. Finds of  their remains are rare: today’s announcement about the existence of the pair is coupled with the confident claim that they are best preserved ever unearthed in the world.”

SHOTS FIRED: Hillary calls out misogynistic Republican hypocrisy“And don’t you wonder—don’t you wonder? You know, for people who claim they hate big government, Republicans sure love using government to step in and make decisions for women about our bodies and our rights!”

POLITICS: Rand Paul says he will filibuster new debt ceiling bill.

MARS: NASA explores where humans could land on the red planet: “We’re holding the first Landing Sites/Exploration Zones Workshop for Human Missions to the Surface of Mars to figure it out. This first workshop will be held Oct. 27-30 at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston.

2051NERD ALERT: Recently discovered map of Middle Earth annotated by JRR Tolkien has tell-tale clues for LOTR fans: “The map was found loose in a copy of the acclaimed illustrator Pauline Baynes’ copy of The Lord of the Rings. Baynes had removed the map from another edition of the novel as she began work on her own colour Map of Middle-earth for Tolkien, which would go on to be published by Allen & Unwin in 1970. Tolkien himself had then copiously annotated it in green ink and pencil, with Baynes adding her own notes to the document while she worked. Blackwell’s, which is currently exhibiting the map in Oxford and selling it for £60,000, called it ‘an important document, and perhaps the finest piece of Tolkien ephemera to emerge in the last 20 years at least’.”

SPORTS: The field is damp at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City as the Mets and Royals get ready to square off in game 1 of the World Series. 

SAN FRANCISCO: Mayor Ed Lee says he’s open to allowing bathhouses to return to the city so long as it wouldn’t hinder the city’s Getting to Zero initiative that seeks to reduce HIV infections by 90% in the next 5 years: “The issue about bathhouses and so forth that is an item that blends entertainment along with safe sex, and I have got to have experts telling me that is something they wouldn’t have a problem with,” said Lee. “I would be open to it but I have got to have that kind of process.”

KING COBRA: Another sweaty and sexy photo from the set of James Franco’s gay murder movie.

Instagram Photo

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Sean Mandell

News: Channing Tatum, Cave Lion Cubs, Debt Ceiling Filibuster, San Francisco, King Cobra