D.C. Trans Woman Murdered After Attacker ‘Embarrassed’ in Front of His ‘Crew’

D.C. Trans Woman Murdered After Attacker ‘Embarrassed’ in Front of His ‘Crew’

Zella Ziona

Rico LebolondA Washington, D.C. man charged with the murder of transgender woman Zella Ziona (above) on October 15th in Montgomery County shot his victim multiple times because she embarrassed him in front of his friends, reports The Washington Blade.

According to a police statement, witnesses told detectives that Rico Hector Leblond (right) and Ziona knew each other and the shooting took place following a “simmering dispute that had been escalating” between the two.

RELATED: Arrest Made in Murder of Philadelphia Trans Woman Keisha Jenkins

The statement, which refers to Ziona by her birth name, reads:

“It appears that Smith and Leblond had some sort of friendship and that information had now become public. Leblond was very upset with Smith when this information came to light. In the recent past, Leblond was with his crew at the Lake Forest Mall when Smith approached his group and began acting flamboyantly towards Leblond and greatly embarrassed Leblond in front of his peers.

“Detectives believe that Smith was assaulted by a subject with a stick at that time. This event may have served as a precursor to lure Smith into the alleyway to fight and where she was ultimately murdered.”

Capt. Darren Francke, commander of the Montgomery County Police Major Crimes Division, said “it’s clear that this was an absolutely premeditated murder…Leblond sought out the victim and killed her.”

Charged with first degree murder, Leblond was being held without bond since his arrest. He was scheduled to appear in court on Monday. His priors include assault, robbery, theft and trespassing.

[Zella Ziona image via Facebook. Rico Leblond image via Montgomery Country Department of Police]

The post D.C. Trans Woman Murdered After Attacker ‘Embarrassed’ in Front of His ‘Crew’ appeared first on Towleroad.


Michael Fitzgerald

D.C. Trans Woman Murdered After Attacker ‘Embarrassed’ in Front of His ‘Crew’

Top Mormon Official: Kim Davis Is Wrong, Same-Sex Marriage Is 'Valid'

Top Mormon Official: Kim Davis Is Wrong, Same-Sex Marriage Is 'Valid'

Apostle Dallin H. Oaks, second in line to the presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and a former Utah State Supreme Court justice, told a gathering of believers that renegade Kentucky clerk Kim Davis is abusing the principle of religious freedom to justify her anti-LGBT stance, and urged conservative activists to stop trying to overturn LGBT nondiscrimination laws.

Davis infamously refused to issue marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples despite being ordered to do so by a federal judge and was sent to jail in early September for contempt of court. Many far right politicians and religious activists have championed the lawbreaker’s cause.

Government officials “are not free to apply personal convictions — religious or other — in place of the defined responsibilities of their public offices,” Oaks told the group, according to The Salt Lake Tribune. “A county clerk’s recent invoking of religious reasons to justify refusal by her office and staff to issue marriage licenses to same-gender couples violates this principle.”

Oaks’s speech, titled “The Boundary Between Church and State,” came at the Second Annual Sacramento Court/Clergy Conference yesterday. The LDS church has remained silent on the controversy until now, but Oaks’s high ranking position as part of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles could be inferred to be the church’s position.

“Believers should acknowledge the validity of constitutional laws,” Oaks told the conference attendees. “Even where they have challenged laws or practices on constitutional grounds, once those laws or practices have been sustained by the highest available authority, believers should acknowledge their validity and submit to them.”

Oaks urged the gathering to moderate their stance on religious freedom and opposition to secular laws in favor of LGBT rights and other hot-button social issues. The goal, he said, is a balance between religion and government. He said believers need to find a “center path” with non-believers.

“Parties with different views on the relationship between church and state should advocate and act with civility,” Oaks said. “We all lose when an atmosphere of anger or hostility or contention prevails. We all lose when we cannot debate public policies without resorting to boycotts, firings and intimidation of our adversaries.”

“On the big issues that divide adversaries on these issues, both sides should seek a balance, not a total victory,” Oaks advised. “For example, religionists should not seek a veto over all nondiscrimination laws that offend their religion, and the proponents of nondiscrimination should not seek a veto over all assertions of religious freedom.”

Bil Browning

www.advocate.com/religion/2015/10/21/top-mormon-official-kim-davis-wrong-same-sex-marriage-valid

Big News For Logo TV

Big News For Logo TV

It’s been quite the year for Logo TV.

The queer TV network announced recently announced that last year it scored its highest ratings in the 10-year history of the network.

“Logo is celebrating its 10th anniversary with not only our highest rated year ever, but as the only cable network to achieve 9 consecutive quarters of year-over-year growth,” Chris McCarthy, General Manager of Logo and VH1, said in a press release. “We have no plans to slow down as we roll out a diverse slate of programs that will continue to spark conversations, entertain our audience and drive results.”

Logo also announced a second season of “Cocktails & Classics,” the return of “RuPaul’s Drag Race: Season 5 RuVealed” and the premiere of a documentary about LGBT elders called “Gen Silent.”

Congrats to our queer brothers and sisters at Logo!

Also on HuffPost:

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Troye Sivan’s ‘Blue Neighbourhood’ Trilogy Ends in the Most Heartbreaking Way Possible: WATCH

Troye Sivan’s ‘Blue Neighbourhood’ Trilogy Ends in the Most Heartbreaking Way Possible: WATCH

Talk Me Down Troye Sivan blue neighbourhood

Yesterday, multi-gifted YouTube superstar and artist Troye Sivan released the third video in his “Blue Neighbourhood” trilogy, which followed a young man’s obsession with his childhood friend through their adolescence and into adulthood.

Young adulthood brings complications, and all does not appear to end well for Sivan’s stand-in or his friend in the series.

If you’ve missed the first two videos, you may want to watch PART 1 (“Wild”) and PART 2 (“Fools”):

Watch Part 3 (“Talk Me Down”):

Sivan had already amassed a huge number of subscribers before coming out of the closet in a video in August 2013, but his following has grown by leaps and bounds. He’s also an actor – most famous playing the young Wolverine in X-Men: Origins: Wolverine and as the title character in the Spud film trilogy.

He appears to be laying all his talent on the table with his new Wild EP project, from which these tracks are taken.

 

The post Troye Sivan’s ‘Blue Neighbourhood’ Trilogy Ends in the Most Heartbreaking Way Possible: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Troye Sivan’s ‘Blue Neighbourhood’ Trilogy Ends in the Most Heartbreaking Way Possible: WATCH

Happy ‘Back to the Future’ Day!

Happy ‘Back to the Future’ Day!

Marty McFly Back to the Future

October 21, 2015 is finally here. Welcome, Marty McFly!

It’s a day that you’ll see all of our present tech compared to the tech predicted in the 1985 Robert Zebecks classic: 3-D holograms, self-lacing shoes, video chat, robotic fueling systems, wearable tech, mobile payments, biometric sensors, and of course hover boards.

Doc Brown has a special message:

 

It’s also a day that has been hoaxed over and over, the L.A. Times notes:

For years, Photoshop hoaxsters have been tweaking it so that Jan. 23, 2009 — no, June 27, 2012 — no, July 11, 2012 — no, Jan. 4, 2015 — is the date to which Marty McFly and Doc Brown travel in “Back to the Future Part II.” (In the original “Back to the Future,” they traveled backward to 1955, not forward to 2015.)

It comes up often enough to merit its own Snopes page.

Since 2013, a Tumblr account has been tricking people by automatically generating a new screenshot that shows that day’s date captioned with “Today is the day Marty McFly goes to the future!” According to the notes, a couple hundred people fell for it every day.

But yes, according to the film, for realz, Doc and Marty and their DeLorean arrived at October 21, 2015 in Mill Valley, California at 4:29 pm today.

The BBC surveyed some British kids’ reactions to the tech in the film.

Not impressed:

 

The post Happy ‘Back to the Future’ Day! appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Happy ‘Back to the Future’ Day!

How This Hollywood Screenwriter Ended Up in a Turkish Prison

How This Hollywood Screenwriter Ended Up in a Turkish Prison

In the mornings I’d awake to the announcements in Turkish coming from the speaker above my locker at the foot of the bed. The announcement was foreign, invading my mind through my ears. Turkish noise. It blasted through my room, awakening me every morning. My cell was a room painted white with a pink wash, 8 feet wide by 10 feet long. My bed was a twin, cemented to the ground. Solitary confinement in Bakırköy prison. Placed in a room alone because I am an out butch lesbian. A gender-nonconforming woman. The powers that be (The warden? The government? I had no idea) did not want me to be “disruptive” to the women’s prison population, so they placed me in solitary, or so the two women from the American consulate explained to me my second day in. Ironic, given my belief that cunnilingus was invented in a women’s prison.

Each day after the announcement I would drop my feet to the cold cement floor and walk six steps to a large window, almost as wide as my arm span, half as tall as me. The Mediterranean sun brightly shined through. A 30-foot gray cement wall surrounded me. A vertical side wall twice as tall as the Harlem brownstone I grew up in. As I looked up at the blue sky above the wall, the roar of a plane rumbled in my ear, preceding the joyful sight of a 747 flying through the sliver of sky I could see. As quickly as it entered, it disappeared. I thought, Someday I’m getting on that plane and back to the woman I love.

In 2009, I was living in Tel Aviv with my Israeli girlfriend when my uncle died. I attempted to take a trip to my hometown for the funeral. During a layover in Istanbul, I was stopped and frisked when I set off the metal detector for not taking off my jewelry. Nine grams of hashish (the length and width of a woman’s middle finger) was found in my front pocket. Normally in Turkey the punishment for this transgression is a few hours in jail and immediate deportation. However, I was placed in prison. The two women from the American consulate were surprised that I was incarcerated. They’d never seen such a thing.

During the time I spent in solitary I learned that prison is designed to be a a dehumanizing experience that reduces people to one mistake, as in my case, or an alleged mistake that legitimizes their being treated like animals. Being locked in a cage, being isolated against your will from your family, being taken from your home, being deprived of basic liberties like talking on the phone and writing letters can do nothing to anyone but detach them from their own humanity. While I was incarcerated in Turkey I was bombarded with questions of if I’m male or female. I’m a butch lesbian. I sound like Vin Diesel. While outside of prison this draws a ton of curiosity, people take my word for it when I tell them that I’m female. This was not the case in Bakırköy prison. It seemed impossible to satisfy my Turkish warden’s inquiries on the matter.

The week I arrived I was taken to a room with an examination table and a cheap room divider screen. I was taken by a guard and a fellow prisoner/interpreter. The prison doctor, a potbellied, gray-haired Turkish man in a doctor’s coat, questioned me through the interpreter.

“Are you male or female?”

“I have breasts,” I jiggled them. The interpreter giggled. “I’m female.”

“Are you male and became female?” asked the doctor.

“If I were male and became female I’d look like Beyoncé or Heidi Klum. Not like a dyke from New York City.” The interpreter blurted out laughter and repeated it in Turkish. That was the end of the visit. The doctor never physically examined me, which suggested that the point of the visit wasn’t to find facts but to invade my privacy, marginalize me, make me feel like an “other.” This was an example of the harassment and the humiliation that gender-nonconforming people are subjected to in prison.      

A month later a young, pretty Turkish guard came to my room to escort me somewhere. Leaving my room was a joy, a mini vacation from the loneliness and regret I felt constantly. It’d been eight days since I’d left the cell. I normally sat around in boxers and T-shirts, so I quickly snapped on a bra, threw on sweatpants and headed out. She took me to a basement where a small van and four men with rifles awaited us. They handcuffed me in the back and off we went!

We arrived at a hospital, and I was escorted through it handcuffed and surrounded by guards — one in front, one behind, and one on either side of me holding their rifles at attention. The pretty guard led the way. Although I’m a masculine woman, I stand 5 foot 3 and walk with a limp. At 120 pounds, I was hardly a physical threat. I felt like Hannibal Lecter as we walked past doctors, nurses, and patients in waiting areas. The guards took me to an ob-gyn. She was an olive-skinned blond, pleasant, in her mid-30s, and she spoke English fluently. She told me that 90 percent of Turkey was Muslim. She examined my outer genitalia and gave me a sonogram, which confirmed that I had a uterus. It offended me that Turkish authorities needed to look between my legs to confirm that I was a woman. It disgusted me, but what could I do? I was a prisoner.

Two and a half months into my stay and two weeks before my court date, my family hired a Turkish lawyer. I learned that the police officers who arrested me stated that I had hid 15 grams in my underwear. The hiding of drugs brought me up to the level of drug trafficker. My lawyer was convinced that I was racially profiled. It was the end of the month, cops have quotas, and most of the African women in Bakırköy are in for drug trafficking.  It was easy to make me one of them.

Although I was finally exonerated of the drug charges, I spent May 23 to August 23, 2009 in solitary confinement at Bakırköy prison. It’s hard to speak about the shame and guilt that I feel for the stupid act of traveling with drugs. The stupidity of what I’d done. The shame of being a girl from Harlem who has two parents and had attended Bank Street School for Children, Sarah Lawrence College, and the American Film Institute. I’d written a movie for Halle Berry at 20th Century Fox. I’m not the kind of girl who gets locked up for drugs. I’m not that kind of black person, yet here I was in Istanbul, being just another nigga. I had no business being there, but I had made bad choices that left me there. I made a mistake. In this case I more than paid for it because I am a black butch lesbian.

MAISHA YEARWOOD

MAISHA YEARWOOD is a Harlem native and a Hollywood screenwriter who has been writing and developing sitcoms and feature films for 19 years. She has written and developed for Warner Bros., Fox Network, Disney, Nickelodeon, ABC Family, Artisan Entertainment, and Discovery Channel. She received her MFA from the American Film Institute and a certificate in screenwriting from the University of California, Los Angeles, Film and Television School. She lives bicoastally between New York City and Los Angeles. She is currently working on a transmedia project around her play 9 Grams. The play recounts her experience in solitary confinement in Istanbul. S. Epatha Merkerson is set to direct the play.

Maisha Yearwood

www.advocate.com/commentary/2015/10/21/how-hollywood-screenwriter-ended-turkish-prison