Miia Love
Parker, a model described as a “brilliant light” who loved puppies and Pose, was found shot in
the Philadelphia suburb of Chester, Pennslyvania on 1 April.
Friends rushed
her to a nearby hospital where she passed away from her injuries, according
to CBS
Philadelphia.
The City of
Chester Police Department said that at around 3:30am, Parker was shot in a
vehicle parked on the 1900 block of Chestnut Street in Delaware County.
Officers
identified 38-year-old Saad Najeed Dwight as a suspect. He is considered armed
and dangerous by the authorities.
While his
motivation for the alleged killing remains unknown at the time of writing, he
faces a lengthy rap sheet with charges including criminal homicide,
third-degree murder, and possession of a firearm not to be carried without a
license.
Parker’s
funeral was held 8 April to celebrate her life.
Miia Love
Parker’s ‘light was extinguished far too soon’, says activist
To those who
knew her, Miaa Love Parker was someone who enjoyed her days studying at Temple
University and leafing through the glossy pages of fashion magazines.
But now,
Parker has become a daunting reminder of the year-on-year surge in transphobic
violence in the US.
Parker is “at
least” the 10th trans, non-binary or gender non-conforming person violently
killed this year, according to the Human
Rights Campaign, an LGBT+ rights group that has tracked the spate of
killings since 2013.
The true death
toll can be difficult to grasp, the HRC warn, given that so many victims of
transphobic violence are misgendered and deadnamed in local news and police
reports – Parker was among them.
Even as trans
Americans have grasped some political victories under the Biden administration,
from the first openly trans, Senate-confirmed federal official to national protections, violence against the community
has continued to soar.
Last year’s total reached a grisly, record-breaking tally of 57 – a number that, even in the months since the year came to an end, has continued to rise as more cases are uncovered.
There are many
reasons why trans people face such elevated risks in their lives. In
Pennsylvania, for example, trans residents have little state protection when it
comes to being discriminated against in employment, housing, education and
public spaces.
The problems,
however, do not end there. Trans people face higher levels of homelessness, poverty and violence – three-fourths of trans
homicides have involved a gun, per the Transgender
Homicide Tracker.
The annual
murder rate for Americans aged between 15 and 34 is one in 12,000, according to
the National
Center for Health Statistics.
For Black
trans women in the exact same age group, the rate rockets to one in 2,600, an
investigation by Mic found.
If in 2015 all
Americans had the same risk of murder as Black trans women, there would have
been 120,087 killed instead of 15,696.
“Friends
remember Miia Love Parker as a brilliant light that brought joy into every room
she entered,” Tori Cooper, the HRC’s director of community engagement for the
Transgender Justice Initiative, told PinkNews.
“That light
was extinguished far too soon. Her death is the second known in the state of
Pennsylvania just this year and one of too many that have happened around the
country.
“We must
honour her light by continuing the fight for justice and protection of our
community.”
The community
has mourned across 2022: Amariey Lej, Duval Princess, Cypress Ramos, Naomie Skinner, Matthew Angelo Spampinato, Paloma Vazquez, Tatiana Labelle and Kathryn ‘Katie’ Newhouse and Kenyatta
Webster.
SOURCE: PINK NEWS
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