Kourtney Yochum Becomes the 7th Trans Person Murdered This Year, We Find Ourselves Asking the Same Old Questions

Feature image via Kourtney Yochum’s Facebook

At 1:20 pm yesterday afternoon in Los Angeles, 32-year-old trans woman of color Kourtney Yochum, who also went by Quartney Davia Dawsonn-Yochum on Facebook, was shot and murdered following a domestic dispute with man who has been arrested. (Some very graphic images have been posted and removed from Kourtney Yochum’s Facebook, so please click through with caution.) Yochum, who lived at the Gateways Apartments, described as a “perm., anent supportive housing project for formerly chronically homeless individuals” by the LA Times, was a beloved member of her community and will be sorely missed. She becomes the seventh trans person murdered in the US this year.

According to Anita Nelson, the Chief Executive of SRO Housing Corporation, who identified Yochum to the Times, Yochum was walking her two dogs when the alleged gunman walked up to her and shot her. After the shooting, the suspect was taken into police custody. Nelson told the Times, “It is mind-boggling; it happened in the open. I’m heartbroken. Our residents are traumatized, our staff is traumatized.” She added that “Everybody loved her. She was very popular.”

When I saw the news that another trans woman had been murdered the same old questions started running through my head. I wondered if she was a woman of color. I wondered if she was the victim of intimate partner violence. I wondered if the number of trans people murdered would keep going up. I wondered if I knew her. When I saw the details, I found out that I was right on most accounts. She was a woman of color, she was apparently murdered after a domestic dispute with her boyfriend or partner, and her death puts us just one behind the number of murdered trans women we were at last year. While I didn’t know her, seeing the outpouring of love from her community and friends broke my heart and broke my spirit.

When all was said and done last year, there were 23 reported murders of transgender people, all of them women, most of them Black, most of the rest Latina and many of them the victims of intimate partner violence. There is a clear pattern and a clear solution to stopping this absurdly terrifying number of murders. We need to get the message across that trans women are women, and that they deserve to be treated like human beings. It sounds simple, but trans women have been saying this for years and it seems like things are just getting worse.

I don’t know what to do anymore. I keep on writing the same thing every time this happens. I keep on saying that this mostly happens to Black and Latina trans women. I keep on saying that it mostly happens to trans women who sleep with men. I keep on saying that it’s on those men to stop this epidemic of violence. I keep on saying that we need to listen to and protect trans women of color and sex workers. I keep on saying that if society will just agree to finally see and treat trans women as women, than many of these murders will stop. Because the men who sleep with trans women are often afraid of being caught, or angry they were “tricked” or ashamed of what they’ve done, or afraid sleeping with a trans woman makes them gay, they lash out and beat, abuse and kill the women they say they love. I, and many others, keep on talking about all these same things and asking all the same questions, but still, the murders keep on happening. I don’t know what new questions to ask. I don’t know what new solutions to look for.

As if to kick the trans community while we were down last night, North Carolina also passed a horrific bill that bans LGBTQ non-discrimination ordinances in the state and forces trans people to use incorrect bathrooms, locker rooms and changing rooms. This bill, signed by Republican Governor Pat McCrory, is exactly the kind of thing that encourages people to murder trans women like Yochum. Under the premise of “protecting religious liberty” and “keeping women and girls safe in restrooms and changing rooms,” bills like this one tell people that trans women are men, that they’re predators, that they’re criminals and that they’re deviants. That they’re freaks who don’t deserve to be treated with any kind of respect or humanity.

This evil law in North Carolina eclipsed the news of Yochum’s death last night. If you looked at Twitter, it would have seemed like this kind of bill has no public support. But the thing is, anti-trans bills are actually extremely politically savvy. In fact, the Republican National Committee itself, endorsed “bathroom bills” back at the beginning of this year. These aren’t fringe politicians or regional beliefs, this is part of the official national Republican platform. That’s correct: the official position of the Republican Party in the United States of America is to actively make trans people’s lives worse and to make trans people, and especially trans women, more unsafe then they are right now, which, frankly, is hard to imagine.

Yochum joins trans women of color Monica Loera, Jasmine Sierra, and Maya Young, as well as Kedarie/Kandicee Johnson, a Black, genderfluid teen and Demarkis Stansberry and Kayden Clarke, two trans men, as the seventh trans person murdered this year. Clarke, who was shot by police, was white. Seven trans people this year, six trans people of color. That’s two every month, and we’re not even done with March yet.

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Mey

Mey Rude is a fat, trans, Latina lesbian living in LA. She's a writer, journalist, and a trans consultant and sensitivity reader. You can follow her on twitter, or go to her website if you want to hire her.

Mey has written 572 articles for us.

22 Comments

  1. Painful and enraging and, like so much bad news, all the more enraging for being so familiar. Thank you for repeating yourself, Mey — it’s atrocious that you (we) are required to repeat yourself (ourselves), but staying silent is no alternative.

  2. Do you mean “in America”? 48 trans women were murdered in Brazil in January this year alone. It would be better if you specified the country you are limiting your stats to as 7 is low for a worldwide number so far.

  3. Oh, great, it’s now illegal for me to pee. Suddenly the idea of packing up everything I own and moving cross country is looking infinitely better by the minute.

  4. Thank you, Mey. Thank you for continuing to ask these questions. Hugs to everyone. Fuck all this shit.

  5. This breaks my heart. I’m so, so sorry and sending my love and support to everyone hurting right now.

    One thing I want to say, Mey, is that most cis women who die a violent death are also killed by their former or current partners, husbands or boyfriends. While the situation is infinitely more complicated for trans women, I’m not convinced that treating trans women as women would solve the problem; trans women would simply continue to be murdered for being women. There is a reason it’s usually trans women and not men who get murdered by men: the power dynamics between men and women situates the men firmly on top, with masculinity construed as violent, oppressive and domineering. On top of that trans women are slammed with homophobia, but even without this additional burden of panic and hatred (as evidenced in the comment above I hope to soon see deleted), the burning issue of male-on-female violence remains.

    • yes, I 100% agree, I definitely don’t think that any women, cis or trans, are safe or treated well in America. And I definitely know that cis women face extremely high rates of IPV. I’m just saying that on top of dealing with that, trans women have to deal with these other intersections of oppression.

  6. As a fellow Los Angelenos, who is trans(but not on hormones yet), this has me nervous and scared(not that I haven’t already been). I think education on LGBTQ issues is the only way to help us, cause the laws surely are not.

  7. Thanks so much for this piece.

    Yes I feel your frustration. How many times do we have to see this? Why is the profile – as you point out – like it is?

    I guess my take in this (I’m an Australian, so please understand my ignorance of things in the US and particularly with matters related to racial relations there) is that education about sex and gender difference in society is so important. Really, it ought to be mandatory as part of every child’s education.

    We have programs about understanding sex and gender diversity in this country and while it is restricted to secondary school and voluntary, it is making an impact.

    We hope to have it made mandatory and we are strongly urging our government to make it available in primary school.

    To change a society you have to start from the ground up, from the cradle up.

  8. I have a Trans gender niece who I love very much she’s a beautiful woman and a beautiful person with the best hearts you could ever ask for this type of stuff really upsets me not only do I feel like she it could be in danger of ignorant people to have to live with the extra stress in her life my heart goes out to her and her community I’m sorry for your loss

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