The victim,
Helle Jae O’Regan, 20, was at Diesel Barbershop last Wednesday with two other
employees, getting it ready for a planned Friday reopening, the San Antonio Current reports.
The shop was
locked, but one of the employees admitted a man who said he wanted to make an
appointment, according to local TV station WOAI. He stepped out for a moment, then returned with
a gun and a knife, and forced the workers into the back of the shop.
Surveillance
video shows him choking one of the three, later identified as O’Regan, until
she passed out, the station reports. The other two employees escaped after the
man stabbed one of them several times, and then he stabbed O’Regan to death,
police told local media.
“Attempts were
made to give the man whatever he wanted … cash, equipment, or whatever it took
to get him out of the shop,” Diesel Barbershop CEO Shayne Brown wrote in a
Facebook post. “The man made it clear that he wasn’t there for money. He then
began asking the employees: “‘What have you done wrong? What have you done
wrong? God sent me here to kill you because you have done something wrong! What
have you done wrong?’ over and over again while forcing them to the back of the
shop.”
Police have
arrested Damion Campbell, 42, on a murder charge, according to San Antonio
media. They were able to track him down because he had given his name to shop
employees and they had entered it into a computer.
Friends
remembered O’Regan as an upbeat, loving person. “Every time I saw her, she
smiled,” friend Luke Tyler told TV station KSAT. “She’d do anything for you. She was a caring
person. I never saw her in a bad mood.”
“Being trans
is so hard, and her life was hard, but she lived like it was the best day of
her life every day,” Tyler added. If her killer had known her, he would want
“to take it all back,” he said.
On social
media, O’Regan often spoke out about political issues and took pride in her
trans identity, according to a Human Rights Campaign blog post. “I was looking at the pictures I used to
take before I transitioned versus now and it made me realize I’m way happier
than I used to be,” she posted on Instagram for Transgender Day of Visibility,
March 31. “I love myself now. Thank you to everyone who’s ever supported me and
to anyone who hasn’t I hope you come around. I’m happy and proud to be myself.”
It does not
appear that O’Regan was targeted for being trans, police said. But her death is
still part of an epidemic of violence against trans people, LGBTQ groups noted.
“We are
disheartened to hear of a loss of a community member, especially a transgender
woman, who are all too often faced with severe and deadly violence,” Robert
Salcido Jr., executive director of Pride Center San Antonio, said in a
statement, according to the Current.
“For the past
several weeks, we have learned of the violent deaths of transgender Americans
at a rate that should be a shock and horror to every single person. We must all
ask ourselves today: ‘What am I doing to ensure a world where a person’s gender
identity is not a potential death sentence?’” Tori Cooper, director of
community engagement for HRC’s Transgender Justice Initiative, said in
the blog post. “The Human Rights Campaign is standing with Helle’s family
and friends in mourning today. Her death further underscores the dire and
urgent need to end violence and discrimination against transgender — and
especially against transgender women — now. ”
O’Regan is at
least the 11th trans person known to have been murdered in the U.S. this year.
Before her, the most recent victims were in Missouri and Puerto Rico, leading presumptive Democratic
presidential nominee Joe Biden to comment Sunday on Twitter.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE DOT COM
Ugh, I wish this would just stop happening already. 🙄 And it will. Just hope it's sooner than later. From reading the story, seems like it wasn't really personal, just a killer choosing randomly.
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