In a message
posted on YouTube, Geter's mother said, “no one should ever take
somebody’s life because of what they are.”
A 26-year-old
Black transgender woman was shot and killed in Augusta, Ga., earlier this
month.
Keshia Chanel
Geter hailed from Eastover, S.C. She was fatally shot outside a Knights Inn on
July 20, where she’d been traveling with a friend, according to the Human Rights Campaign.
Jaquarie
Allen, 22, of August has been charged with murder and possession of a firearm
during the commission of a crime, local news station WACH reports, which deadnamed Geter.
Allen may face
additional charges, the outlet notes. The station reports that Geter’s family
has begun promoting a “transgender lives matter” movement in the wake of
Geter’s death.
In a message
posted on YouTube, Geter’s mother, Michelle Jordan, said, “no one
should ever take somebody’s life because of what they are.”
Tori Cooper,
Human Rights Campaign’s director of community engagement for the Transgender
Justice Initiative, condemned the killing.
“Keshia Chanel
Geter lived her truth as a Black transgender woman. She should still be alive
today to embrace those she loved and continue living a bright and full life.
Instead, Keshia was fatally shot and then suffered the indignity of being
misgendered by the media,” Cooper said in a release. “We demand that more be
done to protect Black transgender women so we can live our lives fully without
violence, harassment, or discrimination. It’s about respect and honor –
treating everyone the way you would want to be treated.”
The
organization said that transgender and gender non-conforming people in Georgia
aren’t necessarily protected under the state's antidiscrimination laws when it
comes to employment, housing, education, and public spaces. And, while
Georgia’s hate crimes law does include sexual orientation, it doesn’t
explicitly include gender identity.
More than 270
anti-LGBTQ+ bills are under consideration in state legislatures, according to
tracking by HRC. Over 110 of those bills specifically target transgender
people.
Geter is at
least the 22st victim of anti-transgender violence in the U.S. this
year. The number in any given year is undoubtedly higher, given misgendering
and deadnaming by police and media. Deadly violence disproportionately
impacts trans women of color, especially Black trans women.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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