Transgender
woman Nina Pop was stabbed to death in Sikeston, Mo., over the weekend, making
her at least the 10th trans person to die by violence in the U.S. this year.
Pop’s body was
found Sunday night in her apartment in the town of about 16,000, 145 miles
south of St. Louis, the Associated
Press reports. No arrest has been made.
Sikeston
police have not determined a motive but are considering the possibility that
her death was a hate crime, Police Chief James McMillen said Tuesday. The
Southeast Missouri Major Case Squad and the Missouri State Highway Patrol are
assisting in the investigation.
Pop, 28, worked
at a fast-food restaurant in Sikeston and was well-known in the area, according
to KFVS, a TV station in nearby Cape Girardeau. “She was
always happy,” her friend Emory McCauley told the station.
The Human
Rights Campaign called for action to address violence against trans Americans.
“For the past four weeks, we have seen the deaths of five transgender women of
color in this country. We are seeing an epidemic of violence that can no longer
be ignored. Transgender and gender-nonconforming people, especially trans women
of color, risk our lives by living as our true selves — and we are being violently
killed for doing so,” Tori Cooper, director of community engagement for HRC’s
Transgender Justice Initiative, said in a blog post.
“We must be
outraged by this news and we must channel that outrage into action immediately.
These crimes must be reported, investigated and prosecuted. These lives must be
mourned, honored and fought for. What we are doing is not enough. HRC mourns
alongside all those who know and loved Nina, and we will continue our tireless
fight to ensure a future where living one’s truth can never become a death
sentence.”
The National
Center for Transgender Equality also issued a statement. “Transgender people —
and particularly transgender women of color — are facing a wave of violence,”
said Executive Director Mara Keisling. “Police and other government officials
must do more to keep transgender people safe, to thoroughly investigate crimes
against out community and to stop enacting laws that enable transgender people
to be targeted.”
Sikeston
police ask that anyone with information related to the crime call the city’s
Department of Public Safety at (573) 471-4711 or Crime Stoppers Hotline at
(573) 471-1500.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE DOT COM
Personally, I am experiencing outrage fatigue. Ahmaud Arbery, Trump: the nightmare that never ends, Lock-down protesters, and now this. Thank you for sharing her story. Just sickens me.
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