Joshua Vallum pleaded guilty last December to the 2015 murder of his former romantic partner, 17-year-old Mercedes Williamson because she was transgender. The 29-year-old man appeared in a Gulfport, Mississippi, courthouse before a federal judge who could have imposed a maximum sentence of life without parole.
Threatening transgender persons may land you in jail
Harper Jean Tobin, spokesperson for the National Center for Transgender Equality [NCTE], a Washington DC advocacy group, said the murder was part of an "epidemic of violence against transgender people" in the United States. "It's essential that biased crime against trans people be recognized as a serious national problem," she said in a phone interview.
In 2009, the US Congress expanded a federal hate crime law to include crimes motivated by a victim's sexual orientation among other factors.
Vallum, a member of the Latin Kings street gang, believed to the largest Hispanic gang in the United States, secretly dated Williamson during the summer of 2014, according to prosecutors. He decided to kill Williamson fearing that he could face retribution from other gang members if word spread she was a transgender woman, prosecutors said.
After luring his former lover to his father's home in Mississippi, in the United States' Deep South, Vallum shocked Williamson with a stun gun before stabbing her repeatedly with a pocket knife. He struck deadly blows to Williamson's head with a hammer after she tried running away, prosecutors said.
Festival highlights marginalisation of transgender people
This was the first case where a victim had been targeted because of gender identity that had been prosecuted under the US federal hate crime law, the Department of Justice said in a statement. "Today's sentencing reflects the importance of holding individuals accountable when they commit violent acts against transgender individuals," said Attorney General Jeff Sessions in a statement.
Vallum had previously been sentenced to life in prison in a state court for the same murder. But federal prosecutors brought an additional lawsuit for hate crime because Mississippi lacks a statute protecting people against hate crimes based on their gender identity, the Department of Justice said.
According to a 2015 NCTE survey, nearly one in 10 US transgender people said they had been physically attacked because of being transgender in the year prior to completing the survey.
Last week, a Virginia state court angered LGBT activists by ruling that attacks motivated by the victim's sexual orientation could not be prosecuted as hate crime under the state's law.
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