No lie is too evil
The New York Times, July 30, 2022:
The person before the parole panel in June 2019 was tall and slim, in far better shape than 81 years of life might have suggested. Mild and polite, the supplicant seemed nothing like the murderer who had spent decades in prison, first for shooting a girlfriend dead in 1963, and then for stabbing another in 1985, stuffing her corpse into a bag and leaving it in Central Park.
“I’m no longer that person,” the inmate told the parole board commissioners. Despite misgivings, they would rule in favor of release.
Two and a half years after leaving Cayuga Correctional Facility, Marceline Harvey was accused again, charged with killing Susan Leyden, 68. Parts of Ms. Leyden’s body were found in March inside a shopping cart in East New York, stuffed in a bag. In Ms. Harvey’s apartment, investigators found a bloody mop, a tub full of towels and a box for an electric saw.
You’ll never guess what the NY Times is concealing here. Note the first two words – “The person.” Note the “Ms. Harvey.” Yes, really: even in reporting crimes against women this horrendous, the Times takes care to lie about what sex he is. The reporters are both women. Many more blood-chilling paragraphs follow before they admit he’s…a trans woman. They don’t of course admit he’s a man.
For seven decades leading up to her latest arrest, Ms. Harvey navigated New York’s intricate criminal justice bureaucracy: the country’s largest police apparatus, the state’s overlapping welfare agencies, its prisons and the officials charged with deciding who remains in them. She confronted the system in some moments, manipulated it in others. Behind her was a trail of crimes so grisly that for decades, parole officials refused to let her out.
…
Decades worth of police documents and court records detail the life of Ms. Harvey, a transgender woman who transitioned at some point after her release from prison. Central to her tale are more than three decades of parole board minutes obtained through the state’s Freedom of Information Law. In them, she insists that authorities exaggerated evidence, changes stories about crimes she admitted and veers between contrition and blaming those she killed.
The records include several examples of her harassing or attacking women throughout her life. She was accused of attempted rape at 14; the victim was an 8-year-old girl. Ms. Harvey, who by her own account struggled with her mental health, said she had to choke down rage when women challenged her manliness before she transitioned — making fun of her soft voice, for example.
This was a boy and then a man, harassing and attacking women all his life, yet the NY Times carefully pretends he is and always was a woman. Two women put their names on the lie.
A homeless shelter worker and people close to Ms. Leyden questioned whether, despite her gender identity, Ms. Harvey should have been placed in a homeless shelter for women, given her history of attacking and murdering them.
Gosh, really??? How horrifically transphobic of them. You won’t catch the New York Times being like that.
Sometimes the disgust is enough to choke a person.
So is there any link between his ‘transness’ and his violence, or is his transness just a ploy to get soft treatment and easier access to victims?
Who knows?
My guess is that they’re two branches of his wrong in the headness, but it’s just a guess.
What an interesting passage! In earlier times, we can see he was so concerned with being manly that he was angered at the suggestion that he might not be a man. These days, transness seems more useful as a tool for garnering sympathy.
Also notable: in earlier times, the progressives would castigate anyone for using mental health as a possible explanation for their criminality. Now, nary a peep from them… so long as the person making the argument is trans.