Ann Cammett,
"Queer Lockdown: Coming to Terms with the Ongoing Criminalization of LGBTQ Communities"
(page 7 of 9)
In its most serious form, homophobia and transphobia can ultimately
affect the outcome of criminal prosecutions and may even encourage the
imposition of death sentences for queer defendants deemed guilty of
capital crimes.[63]
There are no explicit restrictions on what personal
information can be introduced about a defendant's sexuality or gender
expression, and the rules against statements that might inflame a jury
are not necessarily enforced when the defendant is
queer.[64] Ambitious
prosecutors are often free to play to stereotypical beliefs about queer
people, and have reason to single out gender non-conforming defendants
when deciding which cases might convince a jury to opt for
execution.[65]
Appeals to anti-queer and anti-trans animus have a notable impact on
juries.[66]
Moreover, nowhere is the identity of a lesbian more integral
to her treatment than when she is facing punishment for a capital crime.
Lesbians are disproportionately represented among death row inmates. A
staggering 40 percent of women on death row are lesbians or have had
sexual orientation used as a factor against them in criminal
sentencing.[67]
In the case of Wanda Jean Allen, a lesbian defendant executed for the
capital murder of her lover, the trial court admitted evidence that
Allen was the "man" in the lesbian relationship. This evidence was
apparently "used to show that [Allen] was the aggressive person in the
relationship, while [her lover] was more passive." The appeals court
reasoned that the evidence would "help the jury understand why each
party acted the way she did both during events leading up to the
shooting and the shooting itself."[68]
Although homophobia and transphobia have been used in the judicial
system as aggravating factors in the trials of queer defendants,
mainstream gay rights groups have not typically demonstrated support for
capital defendants. Law professor and criminal defense attorney Abbe
Smith analyzes the case of Aileen Wournos, dubbed by the media as the
first "female serial killer."[69]
Wournos, a truck-stop prostitute (and
also a victim of extraordinary sexual abuse throughout her life) was
executed in 1992 for the murders of seven men in Florida. Despite her
claims of self-defense,[70]
Wournos was found guilty by a jury in one and
one-half hours and sentenced to die in one hour and forty-eight
minutes.[71]
Wournos was also a lesbian, and Smith notes that mainstream feminists
were not eager to be associated with a "man-hating" lesbian prostitute
who killed seven men. Wournos presented the worst possible image of a
lesbian killer. As one commentator declared, "her crimes were
male (italics mine) in their commission: predatory, cold-blooded,
premeditated, and malicious."[72]
Media coverage focusing on Wournos's
supposed predatory proclivities served to minimize the effects of
psychological trauma she experienced due to the constant sexual violence
that had been perpetrated against her.
The larger point in Smith's analysis is that, in the rush to punish
heinous crimes, we often fail to examine the very direct link between
victimhood and criminal behavior. Smith concludes that:
Victims and perpetrators . . . are often the same people.
Those who claim to care about victims of child abuse, sexual assault,
and domestic violence and who abandon them when they repeat the behavior
by acting out against others fail to make these critical connections.
Further, it is hypocritical to embrace people when they are 'victims'
and blindly declare them to be 'predators' and 'criminals' when they
become 'perpetrators.' Yet, sadly, this is what many prosecutors do.
Even more disappointing is when thoughtful critics of the current
system, including feminists and advocates for victims—those whose life
work is devoted to social reform—do this.[73]
The critique that Smith offers represents an example of a lost
opportunity to draw attention to systemic bias in the criminal justice
system. Though these high profile events often provide unsympathetic
facts, it is important to demonstrate the trickle down effect of bias on
the lives of queer people who experience daily injustices when
confronting the justice system. These cases also remind us that caution
should be exercised when relying solely on courts and law enforcement to
address intractable social problems, such as domestic violence.
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