2. A Rose by Any Other Name
On October 3, 2002, 17-year old young woman Gwen Amber Rose Araujo of North California was outed by as transgender at a party, four men beat her, slashed her face, hit her with a shovel and frying pan on the head and strangled her. They wrapped her hogtied body in a sheet and dumped her in the Sierra foothills 100 miles away. No one reported the crime. Days later, one of the men, traumatized by the incident, led the police to her gravesite. The men were convicted, but hate crimes charges didn’t stick. The attorneys had to battle at least one defendant’s ‘transgender panic’ defence. On September 28, 2006, the Gwen Araujo Justice for Victims Act (AB 1160) was signed by governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, as the nation’s first law against panic strategies, i.e. using societal bias against victims. After a long fight, her mother’s petition to secure legal recognition of Gwen’s name and birth certificate change posthumously as a female was granted.
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