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  1. #1
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    Default how LEGIT is this story any NYC ppl know?

    Transgender Women Criticize Police Treatment

    By Justine Nicholas - WeNews correspondent

    New York (WOMENSENEWS)--Maria Lopez heard catcalls and whistles from police
    officers. They stopped her, demanded ID and ordered her to a police van. There,
    they strip-searched her.

    One officer "accidentally" brushed against her genitals and breasts while
    handcuffing her.

    Lopez, a 20-year-old transgender woman from Queens, N.Y., was arrested on April
    24 for loitering. Since the Sept. 11 attacks four years ago, she said, police
    have been interpreting the anti-loitering law very broadly. They often profile
    transgender women as sex workers and target areas such as the Village, where
    Lopez, an HIV-AIDS educator and activist, was waiting for a bus that April
    afternoon.

    When Lopez, who has had several encounters with police, was booked into Riker's
    Island her medical intake examination was done in front of 20 male corrections
    officers, she said.

    None of this, she emphasized, took place on a dark, remote country road. Her
    harassment by police began on a street in New York's Greenwich Village "in the
    middle of the afternoon, in broad daylight, while I was waiting for a bus."

    Lopez related the incident at an Amnesty International-USA press conference in
    September, when the Washington, D.C.-based human rights group released an
    11-page report on police misconduct and abuse against lesbian, gay, bisexual and
    transgender people. The report included summaries of 23 testimonies from
    transgender women in New York City who described mistreatment by law enforcement
    officials.

    Lopez--a counselor at People Of Color In Crisis, Inc., which helps homeless and
    HIV-infected minorities in New York City--said at the press conference she has
    met other transgender women who have been stopped, searched and detained on
    phony allegations.

    They were subjected to taunts about their sexuality and their transgender
    identity. Police threatened some with violence, or even death, she said.

    A spokesperson for the New York Police Department said that the department
    treats all people equally, but could not respond immediately on Wednesday with
    details on what policies the department has in place or to the Amnesty report.
    Women's eNews will update the story if the department replies at a later date.

    A Day to End Transgender Violence

    Every November, marches, candlelight vigils and other events around the world
    mark Transgender Remembrance Day aimed at ending the violence against
    transgender people.

    Several transgender-related organizations "black out" their Web sites on that
    day, which began in response to the killing of Rita Hester on Nov. 28, 1998 in
    San Francisco, seven weeks after college student Matthew Shepard's hate-based
    murder in Wyoming.

    The case of Hester's murder has not been solved, like 92 percent of the 3,068
    killings worldwide during the past 30 years based on fear, hatred or bias
    against transgender people, as reported to Interpol.

    Organizers of this year's events are calling particular attention to what they
    perceive as the cavalier way in which anti-transgender violence--and transgender
    people themselves--are treated by police.

    Many of Lopez' clients at People Of Color In Crisis, she said, are teens who
    have been kicked out of or run away from their homes after experiencing
    hostility or violence over their gender identity and expression. As a result,
    they may not have identification or other papers, access to legal assistance or
    eligibility for social services.

    Lopez' state identification card indicates that she is female, as did the
    documents of the other women she mentioned, at least those who had such
    documentation.

    Taunted to Reveal 'Real' Gender

    Nonetheless, police and corrections have taunted them to reveal their "real"
    gender, and their genitals. "There's nothing telling the cops they can't behave
    that way," said Lopez, who blames the ordeals of transgender women at the hands
    of police on poor police oversight and training.

    Only 1 in 6 police departments surveyed has official policies regarding
    interactions with transgender people, according to the Amnesty report. Only 1 in
    3 has written policies regulating the detention of transgender people.

    Lopez' story didn't surprise Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department
    Sgt. Brett Parson, who also spoke at the Amnesty press conference.

    "Whether or not stories like Ms. Lopez' are verified, the perception is there
    that LGBT [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender] people aren't treated
    equally," Parson said, adding that one result of such a perception is that LGBT
    people often don't report assaults and other crimes against them, whether police
    or civilians committed those infractions.

    Parson supervises the Gay and Lesbian Liaison Unit for his department, which is
    increasingly identified by scholars as a leader in how police agencies develop
    relations with lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities.

    Eleven percent of the 810 documented LGBT crime victims in New York City in 2003
    were transgender women, even though they are estimated to be just 1 to 2 percent
    of the overall LGBT population, according to the Washington-based National
    Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs. The coalition, which includes organizations
    that document LGBT-related violence and advocate for victims, interviewed 2,131
    crime victims in 12 U.S. cities for its survey that year.

    Although statistics on how many of the attacks were committed by law enforcement
    officials were not compiled in reports from the coalition or Amnesty, both
    Parson and Lopez contend that police attacks on LGBT people are significant.

    Incidents of assault and harassment persist in New York City, which added
    language to protect "gender identity and expression" to its human rights laws in
    April 2002.

    In adopting the language, New York joined 74 other U.S.
    municipalities--including San Francisco, New Orleans, Boston, Minneapolis and
    Rochester, N.Y. - --that had similar laws in effect that make physical or verbal
    violence against an actual or perceived member of a protected group--such as
    transgenders--a hate crime.

    Hate Crimes Not Documented

    However, New York City law still doesn't require that the police department or
    any other agency document hate crimes. As a result, advocates say transgender
    people are reluctant or fearful of reporting harassment against them and may
    believe that such complaints won't be taken seriously.

    Parson agreed with Lopez that LGBT people--particularly young transgender
    women--comply with police officers' demands and threats because they feel they
    have no recourse.

    Too few officers are trained to properly handle transgender people, according to
    Amnesty International USA Executive Director William F. Schulz. He initiated the
    study of the largest police department in each state as well as the Washington,
    D.C., and San Antonio, Texas, departments.

    Of the 29 departments that responded, only seven have written policies regarding
    strip-searches of transgender people and nine have policies on the detention of
    transgender people. Just 11 of the departments have a LGBT liaison officer on
    staff.

    Schulz, who is also a Unitarian Universalist minister, said the Amnesty study
    found that police departments routinely profile transgender women as sex
    workers. As a result, they are often arrested and detained on vague
    quality-of-life or nuisance charges. In the absence of specific guidelines, law
    enforcement officers arrest and detain people on loitering charges "simply for
    standing in one place for too long," according to Schulz.

    One result of this is that transgender crime victims incur the blame when they
    tangle with the police. "The cops wanted to know what I was doing there at that
    time of day," Lopez recalled. "Too many of us internalize the hate. We don't
    think we're good enough to file charges and seek help."

    Parson looked at her. "You have to speak up. You're worth it." Then, turning to
    the audience, he said, "We have to speak up. We're worth it!"

    Justine Nicholas began her life and writing vocation as Nicholas Valinotti. She
    is a freelance writer based in New York and teaches English at York College.



  2. #2
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    Sounds about right. NYPD isn't as bad as they were during Giuliani's reign of terror, but they are still pretty rough especially in the village area.



  3. #3
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    soooo weird...whats up w/ them molesting her? is that common?



  4. #4
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    I don't know how common that is but I've heard stories before. Off the top of my head I remember one tale of a cop arresting a girl. When they saw that the name on the id didn't match the gender, they told her that if she "showed them her dick" they'd let her go without taking her to jail.



  5. #5
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    thats seriously fucked up



  6. #6
    Platinum Poster Hara_Juku Tgirl's Avatar
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    Its a sad but a common occurence in the big apple. I used to work at a fetish club down by the west village around 14th street (Now moved elsewhere) where there are alot of transexual women working the streets. I have seen a few times police cars and vans and officers rounding up the gurls. This was at the time Gulliani was mayor. And it seems like is still like that with Bloomberg.

    Round up happens mostly during Friday and Saturday nights. Never seen any violence but Im sure it happens here and there. The NYPD are vigilant in cleaning up problem areas and suirveillances areas where theres tranny bars/clubs nearby as there are alot of guys in their cars driving round and round trying to pick up ts women. That sadly led to the demise of the Now Bar, Edeilweiss (always gets raided) both popular TS bars to name a few. Its a common knowledge that most ts bars and clubs are frequented by working ts'es and johns. Which is why I rarely go to a Tranny club. Id much rather go to a straight non gay club with a few friends than be caught inbetween a club raid.

    So I wouldnt be surprised if that article was true.

    ~Kisses.

    HTG


    HURDLE #1: If guys would learn to stop over complementing, and not compliment every tranny (or girl) they see and talk to (so a girl would feel it was sincere and that she's special), maybe they'd get somewhere but a dead end! lol

  7. #7
    Platinum Poster JohnnyWalkerBlackLabel's Avatar
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    Weird because in Queens many of the cops socialize with the girls they see.................... not all of them but the passable ones definately


    snɯıʇdo snʇoʇ soʌ oloʌ

  8. #8
    Platinum Poster Hara_Juku Tgirl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JohnnyWalkerBlackLabel
    Weird because in Queens many of the cops socialize with the girls they see.................... not all of them but the passable ones definately
    LOL. Thats true. Cops in NYC does that too (Ive met some on my way to clubs or going home and hung out with a few). So what youre saying is..If one is not passable or pretty they are out of luck? That's kinda discrimination isnt it JWBL?

    ~Kisses.

    HTG


    HURDLE #1: If guys would learn to stop over complementing, and not compliment every tranny (or girl) they see and talk to (so a girl would feel it was sincere and that she's special), maybe they'd get somewhere but a dead end! lol

  9. #9
    Platinum Poster JohnnyWalkerBlackLabel's Avatar
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    I'm not saying that at all. I am just saying what I've seen. Interestingly enough the cops I've seen talking to these girls ONLY talk to the most passable of the few....


    snɯıʇdo snʇoʇ soʌ oloʌ

  10. #10
    Platinum Poster Hara_Juku Tgirl's Avatar
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    LOL. I know JWBL..Was just playin' with you sweety. There are nice cops (like there are nice people) out there that isnt rude or anything to transgendered women.

    ~Kisses.

    HTG


    HURDLE #1: If guys would learn to stop over complementing, and not compliment every tranny (or girl) they see and talk to (so a girl would feel it was sincere and that she's special), maybe they'd get somewhere but a dead end! lol

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