Los Angeles Times

Charges in attack on transgende­r woman in park

- By James Queally

A member of MS-13 was charged this week with assaulting a transgende­r woman Thursday in MacArthur Park, the latest in a string of attacks allegedly committed by the gang against members of the LGBTQ community in the area, prosecutor­s said.

Gabriel Orellana, 19, was charged with one count of battery likely to produce great bodily injury in connection with the attack, according to Deputy Dist. Atty. Richard Ceballos.

Orellana and another suspect — who has yet to be arrested or charged — are believed to have approached the victim, asked why she was there and yelled derogatory remarks before knocking her to the ground and striking her repeatedly in the head and torso, Ceballos said.

The woman was treated at a hospital and required stitches, Ceballos said. It was at least the fourth time a member of the gang had been linked to violence against a transgende­r woman in the park since August

2020.

Last year, prosecutor­s filed three counts of attempted murder against MS-13 member Donoban Fonseca, who is accused of stabbing two transgende­r women in separate incidents between August and October. He also is alleged to have physically assaulted one of the women last September, authoritie­s said.

Police and prosecutor­s said the assailants made derogatory comments about the victims’ sexual identity or gender, in one case yelling, “We don’t want gays in the park.” Though gender identity and sexual orientatio­n are different, LGBTQ activists say people who show hatred for one or the other often conflate the two.

Orellana was arrested by LAPD officers on suspicion of attempted robbery March 20, just five days before the latest alleged assault, jail records show. But he was released after prosecutor­s rejected the case because the robbery victim was uncooperat­ive, Ceballos said.

Orellana pleaded not guilty during a brief court appearance Monday. A preliminar­y hearing is slated for April 9, said Ricardo Santiago, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office.

LAPD officials have in recent weeks expressed concern about violence against transgende­r women in MacArthur Park. Just two days before the attack, the LAPD held a “midnight stroll,” with community leaders walking through the park alongside police officers, offering food and other resources to transgende­r residents.

“Given the outlandish attacks on two transgende­r women that occurred in the MacArthur Park area just months ago, and the underlying incidence of gang violence and intimidati­on in that community, we thought that it was appropriat­e to have that outreach and that engagement in that park,” LAPD Chief Michel Moore told the city’s civilian Police Commission last week.

LAPD Assistant Chief Beatrice Girmala, the department’s liaison with the LGBTQ community, said she has been involved in several meetings with transgende­r advocacy groups and service providers in recent months, including the Trans Wellness Center in Westlake, to try to determine how the department can best assist women who are feeling targeted in the area.

“They’re asking for the ability to be out in public, to not feel that every time they’re out there, no matter what time of day it is, that they are being judged or feeling vulnerable,” she said.

Girmala said the recent spate of attacks may be driven by the fact that coronaviru­s restrictio­ns have shuttered a number of businesses where transgende­r women used to socialize in the neighborho­od, leading them to the park, which MS-13 claims as its territory.

“[MS-13], they’re in and out of that park and probably saw what they would think is a target of some kind,” she said of the attacks. “That’s something we’re feeling and hearing from the community.”

Ceballos, who is prosecutin­g both cases, said he filed hate crime enhancemen­ts against both Fonseca and Orellana.

Although L.A. County Dist. Atty. George Gascón barred the use of sentencing enhancemen­ts when he took office last December, he has since walked back the policy in cases involving “the most vulnerable victims.”

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