She Was A "Vibrant Young Person": Another Black Trans Woman Was Found Dead

She Was A "Vibrant Young Person": Another Black Trans Woman Was Found Dead




By Lauren Rearick


For the fifth time in far less than a month, a black transgender woman was noticed dead In America. Her name was Zoe Spears; her death comes far less than three months immediately after another of a black transgender woman was murdered in Fairmount Heights, a Maryland suburb located minutes from Washington, D.C.


According to Maryland’s Prince George County Police, 23-year-old Spears was shot and killed on Thursday, June 13, NBC News reported. A 911 call for a “unresponsive female” on a sidewalk led police to the location of Spears’s body, a release from the police department noted. Their answer was also late: Authorities declared her dead at the scene, Buzzfeed News reported.


The shooting occurred four blocks from where Ashanti Carmon, a 27-year-old black transgender woman, was killed in March 2019, NBC News notes. Brian Reilly, major of the Prince George police, could not confirm whether there was a “direct link” between the murders, Buzzfeed News announced, although he did mention that “it’s unusual that we had two murders like this within a couple blocks of each other.” He also mentioned the two ladies knew each other.


According to Earline Budd, a case specialist at HIPS, a harm loss nonprofit in Washington, DC, Spears was with Carmon any time the latter was killed. Budd told the Washington Post that Spears remained fearful for her own life soon after witnessing her friend’s murder; police could not confirm whether Spears had been at the scene of Carmon’s death.


Budd told the Washington Post that Spears was a “vibrant young person.” Ruby Corado, the executive director of Casa Ruby LGBTQ Community Center, instructed them paper that Spears was like a daughter to her, and that Spears was working on moving forward from a past that had abandoned her feeling “very damaged and very hurt.”


These two murders aren’t isolated incidents — they come just days immediately after 26-year-old Chynal Lindsey was killed in Texas. According to intelligence from the Human Rights Campaign, at least ten transgender females of color, including Spears, have been killed in the U.S. This year alone. At least 26 transgender people were killed in the U.S. In 2018; the majority were trans girls of color.


Hancie Stokes, the communications coordinator for the Washington D.C. Based LGBTQ+ youth company SMYAL, called for the community to come with each other. “We will not stand idly by while there really are attacks and threats on our community,” she wrote in a statement to MTV News. “This is a time for mourning and healing with each other, however this is also a time to take action together.” She also made particular note of “the fear that young queer people survive with and carry with them on a day-to-day basis” and encouraged LGBTQ+ people feeling concerned for their safety to seek out supportive resources in their community and online.


Elizabeth Warren and Julián Castro, two hopefuls for the 2020 Democractic presidential nominee, have also called for change. Castro tweeted of a necessary for immediate political action, writing, “There’s a crisis of black trans females being targeted and murdered across the U.S. We need to act to protect and support trans girls from violence—and we need to do it now.”


Warren also called the continued murders a crisis, and remembered the females who have been murdered this year by naming them. “Dana Martin. Ashanti Carmon. Claire Legato. Muhlaysia Booker. Paris Cameron. Michelle “Tamika” Washington. Chynal Lindsey. Jazzaline Ware. Chanel Scurlock. And right now Zoe Spears…We’ll fight this, and we'll continue to mention their names,” she wrote.


While several of the other presidential candidates have not however spoken out, @they could further address their stance on protection for transgender people during a LGBTQ+ focused debate scheduled for October 10.


The Human Rights Campaign is also asking for communities and politicians to take action in reducing anti-trans stigma that they attribute with spurring acts of violence. In its “Dismantling a Culture of Violence” report, the corporation encouraged politicians to fight back against discriminatory transgender laws that allowance housing and healthcare options; called for the creation of more inclusive community spaces; and asked for an end to costs that ban trans people from certain public spaces, including bathrooms and locker rooms.


Such moves stand in stark contrast to the Trump administration’s current slate of policies, which include proposing a rule that would remove federal protections for transgender patients from health care discrimination; making it easier for government housing to discriminate against transgender homeless people; and expressing a sweeping opposition to the Equality Act, which would strengthen civil right protects for LGBTQ+ Americans.









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