Across the planet, criminal suspects and prison inmates are trying to escape what they believe to be the shackles of the sex with which they were born.
Worse still, courts and prison officials are listening to the men who say they are women, and endangering women prison inmates in the process.
In one recent case reported at Reduxx, a Canadian murder suspect has had his trial delayed because he wants to change his name.
In another, a convicted sex trafficker has convinced a major newspaper that he’s a mythic hero in the greatest fight of his life: the struggle for “trans rights.”
Dismembered Victim
The murder suspect is one Dereck Donald Sears, who calls himself “Gabriella.”
In 2021, he was arrested and charged with second-degree murder in connection with the death of Darren Middleton in Kelowna, British Columbia.
“Middleton’s corpse was ‘beaten and mutilated,’ with his penis and testicles being partially or fully removed,” Reduxx reported at the time:
Middleton’s partially clothed body was found lying next to a bathtub with the water running, and four weapons were found at the scene, including a retractable utility knife and a baseball bat.
Middleton had died of blunt force trauma to the head, but had stab wounds and defensive injuries. Many of his wounds were inflicted post-mortem.
Sears has pulled legal stunts to prolong his trial, including firing his original attorneys. A second attorney stopped representation because of a “fundamental breakdown in the solicitor-client relationship,” the website reported.
And now, Reduxx reported, citing the Castanet website, Sears will likely get another delay. He wants the name on his indictment changed to “Gabriella” because of his “equality rights” guaranteed in Section 15 of the nation’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Crown prosecutor David Grabavac said during an appearance Thursday that he’s “not unsympathetic” to Sears’ concerns, but “maybe perhaps this isn’t the right time to be bringing this application.”
“This is a novel legal issue which may have far-reaching consequences … I’ve never seen Section 15 of the Charter used like this in a criminal matter,” Grabavac said. “We haven’t had a chance to research this issue … we’re going to need a couple weeks to figure out what position, if any, we have on this.”
“Gabriella’s” next court appearance is in two weeks.
Sex Trafficker’s the Victim
Prisoner No. 2 this week is one “Ayana Satyagrahi,” whose real name is Marcus Choice Williams. The estimable “Ayana” is doing a 30-year stretch for sex trafficking.
“The Kansas City Star has published a glowing profile on a transgender inmate convicted of operating a multi-state sex trafficking ring, praising his ‘fight for rights’ while incarcerated at a Kansas prison,” Reduxx reported:
“Ayana Satyagrahi was five when she found herself playing in her bedroom closet and putting on her younger sister’s yellow sundress. Now 49, she lives in a cell at the men’s prison in Leavenworth not much larger than that closet,” the article begins, noting that “Satyagrahi is one of an estimated 2,170 transgender people under the supervision of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.”
The vast majority of the article is dedicated to Satyagrahi’s claimed struggles as he is incarcerated in a men’s prison, with Satyagrahi claiming … that the Bureau of Prisons is “hostile” towards transgender inmates.
Just one line is dedicated to Satyagrahi’s crimes, with [the author] writing that he was “sentenced to 30 years in a sex trafficking case,” and later dismissing Satyagrahi’s crimes as “recruiting women into sex work.”
Of course, that isn’t the whole truth. In fact, “Ayana” was “a violent pimp,” Reduxx continued. Federal authorities accused “Ayana” of running a “modern-day slavery” operation.
“Ayana” began his pimping career in 2003, and three years later went multi-state:
Satyagrahi would specifically target vulnerable women, specifically single mothers from troubled backgrounds, and, in some cases, he used a combination of deception, fraud, coercion, threats and physical violence to keep the women under his control. The FBI release emphasized that the victims “suffered physical assaults, sexual abuse, and daily degradation,” and that Satyagrahi had a “callous disregard for them as individuals.”
“Ayana” took every penny the women earned by selling themselves, five of whom were single mothers. But in the eye of the Star, man-lady “Ayana” is the real victim.
“Trans women” in prisons are an increasing nuisance and threat to women inmates.
As The New American reported last week, citing Reduxx, a “trans woman” murderer has sued the Kansas Department of Corrections because it won’t house him in the general population of the women’s prison, but instead keeps him in restrictive housing.
And in March, Reduxx detailed the story of a woman prisoner sexually assaulted by a “trans woman” with whom the woman actually shared a cell.