Post by Scumhunter on May 31, 2016 20:26:30 GMT -5
(Above photo credit: New Orleans Advocate website)
Link to A&E "First 48" episode (need a listed cable provider to view): www.aetv.com/shows/the-first-48/season-15/episode-20
From the New Orleans Advocate website (advocate.com):
New Orleans trans advocates say they have been left stunned by the death of Penny Proud, one of their city's young, black trans residents, the latest casualty in the ongoing national trend of antitrans violence that has seen five trans women of color killed within the first five weeks of 2015.
Proud, 21, was fatally shot multiple times at 1:30 a.m. on February 10, according to local news report from NOLA that the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs has linked to Proud. Few other details are currently available, but the first press release to address the situation, from New Orleans LGBT youth of color activist group BreakOUT!, condemned NOLA's report for misgendering Proud.
In announcing her death, BreakOUT! has urged media to cover Proud's story, as well as those of all trans victims, with respect for her preferred identity, name, and pronoun, which also accords with journalistic standards endorsed by the Associated Press and GLAAD. The youth group had already been writing a press release concerning the recent deaths of Yazmin Vash Payne, 33, in Los Angeles; Ty Underwood, 24, in North Tyler, Texas; Lamia Beard, 30, in Norfolk, Va.; and Papi Edwards, 20, in Lousville, Ky., when news of Proud's murder emerged from local sources. San Francisco resident Taja DeJesus was also discovered fatally stabbed this week.
"These deaths had little to no mainstream media attention," BreakOUT! stated. "The silence and lack of action from media on behalf of the Black transgender community sends a strong message that Black Trans Lives, in fact, do not matter."
The NCAVP, of which BreakOUT! is a member, concurred. "2015 has begun in absolute tragedy, with the loss of four black transgender women and one Latina transgender woman," stated Chai Jinduraswat, codirector of community organizing and public advocacy at the New York City Anti-Violence Project. "We all must take immediate action by supporting the leadership of transgender women of color, public awareness and respect campaigns, speaking out against this violence, and protecting transgender people from harassment and discrimination. This is an epidemic and an outrage, and we all have to commit as a nation to ending this violence."
A candlelight vigil for Proud will be held tonight 7 p.m. at the site of her death, on the 1100 Block of North Claiborne Ave., in the Treme district of New Orleans, according to the Transgender Law Center.
Anyone with information about Proud's murder is asked to contact Homicide Detective Robert Barrere at 504-658-5300, or contact Crimestoppers at 504-822-1111 or www.crimestoppersgno.org.
www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2015/02/10/new-orleans-sees-fifth-trans-woman-color-murdered-us-2015
Thoughts? The reason I'm placing this case on the unsolved on tv section is as you can see in the link under Penny's picture, it was profiled on the A&E crime series "The First 48" and sadly is still unsolved. A couple notes from the episode:
-Penny's birth name is Perry Thornton
-Two young men were seen running from the crime scene with Penny's purse. This seems to indicate (and online articles seem to confirm this), that this may have been a robbery as opposed to a hate crime. But as we can see from the statistics, murders of transgenders, and especially black transgenders are in my opinion not as well covered in the media as they should be.
-Blood was found inside the purse after detectives were able to find it, and there was DNA from a hand print inside the purse that led to a man who said he was inside Penny's car for 20 minutes the night she was murdered after meeting her on a street corner, but went home before she was killed.
-Detectives are still waiting for a CODIS match from the blood. So far they have had no luck, and the person or persons who killed Penny have no prior arrests that they are aware of at the moment.
In any case, I hope it gets solved. Penny was a human being, with a family, with friends, and her life mattered just like any other human being matters.
One thing I do know is people to talk, and I find it hard to believe there's not someone out there who knows exactly what happened, especially with Penny's case now being profiled on The First 48. So if anyone out there, in New Orleans or elsewhere, has any information on this case, they need to wonder what if that was their friend, their family member that was murdered, do the right thing, and call NOPD.
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