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LGBTQ+

2021 is now the deadliest year on record for transgender people

This year has shattered the record of transgender homicides in a year with 47 to date — most of them Black or Latinx.

People hold photos of murdered transgender people.
People hold photos of murdered transgender people, during the Queer Liberation March in New York on June 27, 2021. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

By

Orion Rummler, Kate Sosin

Published

2021-11-09 17:48
5:48
November 9, 2021
pm

Updated

2021-11-20 13:11:41.000000
America/Chicago

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Editor’s note: This article has been updated.

The list of names now is longer than it’s ever been. 

With nearly two months left, 2021 has shattered the record of transgender homicides in a year with 47 to date — most of them Black or Latinx — according to the Human Rights Campaign. Last year held the previous record with 44 trans murders. 

Angel Naira, a 36-year-old Black transgender woman who worked in home health care, was fatally shot inside her home on Nov. 11 in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, per the HRC.

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Jenny De Leon, a 25-year-old Latina trans woman in Tampa, Florida, was found dead on Nov. 2. Friends and family members held a vigil for her at local Vinoy Park last week.

“I don’t want it to be forgotten. No matter how long it takes, I still want justice for her,” Jenny’s sister, Iris de Leon, told FOX 13 Tampa Bay during the vigil.

Marquiisha Lawrence, a 28-year-old Black trans woman in South Carolina, was killed on November 4. In a statement, Tori Cooper, director of community engagement for the Transgender Justice Initiative for HRC, called Lawrence’s death a tragic milestone, for her and for a community that deeply loved her. 

“We must commit to honoring trans lives and ending the horrific epidemic of violence that plagues our community,” Cooper said. “Marquiisha deserved nothing less than our full commitment to building a better future for trans people.”

The transgender writer and activist Raquel Willis called the news demoralizing and expected given the lack of investment in trans communities of color in recent years. 

“I think that there have been consistent failures at addressing transgender people and the system of oppression that we’re constantly facing,” Willis said. “Overwhelmingly, the leadership of our largest LGBTQ pride organizations are not Black and Brown trans women, or people in particular, and overwhelmingly they are not addressing our needs.”

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Five more Black trans people were killed this year than last year, per HRC data. 

On Nov. 20, President Biden released a statement recognizing the record number of deaths and mourning those who lost their lives — and calling on lawmakers to oppose anti-trans bills that aim to restrict trans minors’ access to sports and gender-affirming care.

“Transgender people are some of the bravest Americans I know. But no person should have to be brave just to live in safety and dignity,” he said.

David Johns, executive director of the National Black Justice Coalition, said that providing financial support for Black trans women and decriminalizing sex work — which many trans women must turn to when denied other forms of employment — is an important part of addressing the underlying inequalities that leave trans women of color vulnerable to violence.

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“At the core for me, it’s about acknowledging that trans folks are often economically disadvantaged, much like other Black, queer, nonbinary non-conforming folks to no fault of their own,” he said. 

Johns also said that the Biden administration needs to ensure that Black trans people are protected under existing hate crime laws.

The deaths of De Leon, Lawrence and Naira came as transgender communities across the world prepared to honor trans homicide victims for Transgender Day of Remembrance, an annual vigil on November 20 for those slain living their truths. The somber event often includes a reading of the names of the dead, a list that grown longer in recent years as anti-transgender violence has spiked due to discrimination that advocates say has been fueled by an anti-trans political climate.

More anti-trans bills were passed in 2021 than in any other year, with nine bills cracking down on transgender youth participation on extracurricular sports and another limiting adolescent access to gender-affirming medical care. Advocates have repeatedly raised concerns this year that language in those bills — which often characterizes trans girls as boys — would spur more violent attacks against trans people.

The tally of transgender murder victims has increasingly been common practice since the stabbing of Rita Hester in Boston in 1998. The death of Hester, who was misgendered by both mainstream and LGBTQ+ media, inspired transgender activist Gwendolyn Ann Smith to launch a website honoring those killed. The site would, in turn, spur Transgender Day of Remembrance as well as the practice of taking stock of those lost to violence. 

But advocates warn that such totals can be flawed. In 2018, LGBTQ+ media organization GLAAD cautioned news outlets from sensationalizing stories about “the deadliest year on record for transgender people” without context. The organization pointed out that anti-trans murders often go inaccurately reported because of misgendering by police and media. As law enforcement and media have become more sensitive to trans people, reporting has improved, sometimes increasing visibility of those killed, advocates said. 

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