A Black
transgender woman from Chicago was shot to death earlier this month, marking
the second recent murder of a trans woman in the city.
Davarea
Alexander, 28, who was also known as Tyianna, was one of two individuals who
were shot and killed near a railroad line at 817 West 75th Street, police told
Gay City News. The other victim, who was 31 years old, was shot in the lower
left side and upper left bicep.
So far,
there’s not enough information available to indicate whether the killing of
Alexander was motivated by anti-trans bias. The killing came just weeks after a
different trans woman, Courtney
“Eshay” Key, was fatally shot to death in Chicago on Christmas.
“It’s really
difficult to prove unless you have someone in custody,” Sally Brown, a public
information officer for the Chicago Police Department, said in an interview
with Gay City News. “It’s just so hard to classify something as a hate crime
without a lot of evidence pointing to that.”
Chicago police
— who originally misgendered Alexander — did not directly respond to a question
about whether the 31-year-old victim was transgender. The Chicago Police
Department currently does not have a process for collecting a victim’s gender
identity. Instead, they conflate gender with a person’s sex assigned at birth.
Brown said officers were not trying to “insult” the victim but were documenting
the sex listed on her government-issued ID.
“I know people
were upset about that at first, but that’s the reasoning behind it. We’re very
sensitive to those things,” Brown said. “It’s just they have to put something
down on the report like that.”
Meanwhile,
police have yet to make headway in solving Key’s death. Nobody has been taken
into custody and sources told the Chicago
Tribune the motive is unclear, but Key’s family believes she was killed
because she was a trans woman. The family is requesting that the department
investigate the case as a hate crime.
The Brave
Space Alliance, a Black, trans-led LGBTQ advocacy group, denounced the ongoing
trend of transphobic violence as they vowed to assist with the costs of
Alexander’s funeral.
“Within the
last month, Chicago has lost two Black trans women to transphobic violence,”
the organization noted on Twitter. “Courtney Eshay Key and Davarea Alexander
were murdered in our city, and now, once again, we must mourn as a community.
All Black trans lives matter, and yet we are increasingly faced with systems
and individuals who speak those words but do nothing to prove their commitment
to Black and trans liberation.”
Alexander’s
killing contributes to a deadly start to a new year after the Human
Rights Campaign tracked the worst year on record for murders targeting
transgender and non-binary individuals, with most of those killings targeting
trans women of color.
“Our community
members are being murdered because our lives are devalued, our power is feared,
and our truth is revolutionary,” the organization added. “We will be here for
the families of every member of our community lost to transphobic violence. We
love our community, and we will never be silent in the face of the loss of yet
another one of our sisters.”
SOURCE: GAY CITY NEWS
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