Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Jurors believed Megan Thee Stallion, but many women like her are ignored

- ERIKA D. SMITH

Women are waiting — especially Black women.

For an apology. For remorse. For some humility. Hell, for even a modicum of self-awareness.

But I’m not holding my breath for any of that.

On Friday, a jury convicted Tory Lanez, a Canadian rapper whose real name is Daystar Peterson, of assault and gun charges in the Hollywood Hills shooting of fellow rapper Megan Thee Stallion, whose real name is Megan Pete.

The verdict comes more than two years after Stallion told police that Lanez attacked her during an argument that started while riding in an SUV along Nichols Canyon Road. When she asked to get out, he shot at her feet, apparently shouting, “Dance, b—!”

The injuries were so bad that she needed surgery to remove bullet fragments from her left heel.

The victim in this case has always been clear.

Yet you wouldn’t know that from the misogynist­ic mess that dominated headlines and social media before and during the trial in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

“This whole story has not been about the shooting,” Stallion testified this month. “It’s only been about who I been having sex with.”

Indeed, in hopes of clearing Lanez’s name, defense attorneys tried to pin the shooting on another Black woman, trotting out a lame, male-ego-affirming argument about the two women getting into a fight because they were attracted to the same man — their client.

Even more awful was Lanez himself, who released a whole album — which wasn’t his most popular but wasn’t a flop, either — about how he was being framed for shooting Stallion and insinuatin­g that she had lied about the ordeal.

“How the f— you get shot in your foot,” he rapped, “don’t hit no bones or tendons?”

And rather than pushback, the response from the broader hip-hop community ranged from conspicuou­s silence to outright agreement. Just last month, Drake rapped on his new song with 21 Savage: “This b— lie about getting shot but she still a stallion.”

This is exactly why #BelieveBla­ckWomen and #ProtectBla­ckWomen were trending on Twitter after the verdict. Stallion long ago pointed out how neither tends to happen.

“I was recently the victim of an act of violence by a man. After a party, I was shot twice as I walked away from him. We were not in a relationsh­ip. Truthfully, I was shocked that I ended up in that place,” she wrote in an op-ed for the New York Times in late 2020.

“My initial silence about what happened was out of fear for myself and my friends. Even as a victim, I have been met with skepticism and judgment. The way people have publicly questioned and debated whether I played a role in my own violent assault proves that my fears about discussing what happened were, unfortunat­ely, warranted.”

On Friday, Los Angeles County

Dist. Atty. George Gascón praised Stallion’s “incredible courage” for testifying, despite “repeated and grotesque attacks” on her character.

“Women, especially Black women, are afraid to report crimes like assault and sexual violence because they are too often not believed,” he said in a statement, which alluded to the women who testified against rapist Harvey Weinstein. “This trial, for the second time this month, highlighte­d the numerous ways that our society must do better for women.”

Even in California, women, particular­ly Black and queer women, are among the most vulnerable. According to the Public Policy Institute of California, the female jail population has increased sixfold since 1970 — twice as much as the male population. And there’s a short line between women who are incarcerat­ed and women who are victims.

Often, Black women end up behind bars because of some combinatio­n of poverty, addiction and being in the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong man.

So, I’ll remind you again about Lanez’s attorneys’ craven strategy to convince the jury that Stallion’s former best friend, Kelsey Harris, was really the shooter.

That didn’t work, obviously. Lanez now faces more than 20 years in prison.

But a conviction doesn’t necessaril­y mean that Stallion will receive the apologies she is due, much less see some of that remorse, humility and self-awareness I mentioned. The legion of influencer­s who have made endless excuses for Lanez were mighty quiet on Friday.

Except for Lanez’s father. In the minutes after the verdict was read and Superior Court Judge David Herriford set a sentencing hearing for late January, he jumped up from his seat in the courtroom and started yelling at prosecutor­s.

“This wicked system!” he said, as my colleagues James Queally and Jonah Valdez reported. “You are wicked! You know exactly what you did!”

Outside, after sheriff ’s deputies had escorted him and other relatives from the courtroom, Lanez’s father continued ranting, cursing the record label Roc Nation for supposedly rigging the trial and promising a comeuppanc­e from on high.

“It’s not over! It is NOT over,” he shouted. “God does not lose!”

Or maybe this isn’t about God.

Maybe Lanez is just guilty. And maybe it’s time, once and for all, that we believe and protect Black women.

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? SUPPORTERS of rapper Megan Thee Stallion gather Dec. 13 outside a Los Angeles court. On Friday, jurors found Tory Lanez guilty of shooting her in the feet during a 2020 argument in Hollywood.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times SUPPORTERS of rapper Megan Thee Stallion gather Dec. 13 outside a Los Angeles court. On Friday, jurors found Tory Lanez guilty of shooting her in the feet during a 2020 argument in Hollywood.
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 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? RAPPER Megan Thee Stallion arrives at a Los Angeles court Dec. 13 to testify against Tory Lanez, who faces more than 20 years in prison for the shooting.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times RAPPER Megan Thee Stallion arrives at a Los Angeles court Dec. 13 to testify against Tory Lanez, who faces more than 20 years in prison for the shooting.

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