The Arizona Republic

Death of trans resident raising questions

- Jose R. Gonzalez Reach breaking news reporter Jose R. Gonzalez at jose.gonzalez@gannett.com

The family of slain south Phoenix resident Marcos Lugo was scrambling to collect funds for a funeral and was left wondering whether a killer on the loose targeted their loved one for being transgende­r.

The 43-year-old Lugo used the alias Kitty Monroe and regularly sported women’s clothing complement­ed by colorful makeup and wigs with long tresses. Siblings said Lugo used he/ him/his pronouns.

“He was always (the) main character,” said Lugo’s sister, Brissa Lugo, 30, in an interview with The Arizona Republic while describing Marcos’ bold fashion choices. “He was very protective, loving and he would do the most just to make you feel comfortabl­e.”

Police investigat­e hit-and-run

Witnesses who came forward have said he was attacked about 2 a.m. Jan. 1 by a man and woman in the parking lot of Casa de Licores, a liquor drive-thru on Broadway Road near Ninth Street, Brissa said.

Phoenix police spokesman Sgt. Philip Krynsky told The Republic the initial investigat­ion indicated Marcos Lugo’s case was being handled as a fatal hitand-run. Krynsky said he could not share some details of the case out of concern it could hinder the department’s investigat­ion.

Brissa Lugo said a witness told her a man and woman were chasing Lugo, with the man slugging him in the back with a gun. Collapsed on the ground, Lugo was then run over by the man’s black two-door truck, which was described as making a loud noise as if it had no exhaust. She was told another driver then accidental­ly hit Lugo.

“I wouldn’t doubt that it would be a possibilit­y,” Brissa said as to whether her brother was killed for being transgende­r. She said he was a past victim of violence for presenting as a woman, and she believes he was dressed as a woman when he was slain.

Victim faced identity-based hostilitie­s

Brissa shared that Lugo often would face taunts and glares from strangers whenever he was presenting as a woman in public. “People were mean to him,” she said. In a video posted on April 5 on the YouTube channel Tales from the Streets, Lugo detailed the violence he encountere­d as a transgende­r person. He was attacked in Los Angeles and then again nearly a year later in Phoenix, leaving his jaw broken both times, he said in the video.

He went on to say in the video interview that he did not dwell on what gender pronouns people used on him. However, he expressed frustratio­n at store clerks who addressed him as “sir” when he was presenting as a woman, explaining the misgenderi­ng was done to shame him. “I’m not afraid to exist, but I’m afraid of what other people would see,” Lugo said in the video. “I’m afraid of what their perception of me is.”

The eldest sibling looked out for others

Lugo, the oldest of seven children, spent a number of years living on the streets, but home often would come calling for him, Brissa said. He had returned to help care for his 60-year-old mother, who had a minor stroke last year and has shown early signs of dementia. Brissa said Marcos was a loving son who would cook for their mother, bathe her and occasional­ly do her hair and makeup.

It was a cold New Year’s Eve night in the hours before Lugo was killed. Always supportive of his fashion choices, his mother had loaned him a black fur coat Brissa had gifted her for Christmas.

Brissa said their mother was devastated in thinking that he may have been run over a second time because the coat concealed him in the dark early morning hours, with the air already clouded by fireworks smoke in the area.

Lugo’s siblings were raising money on GoFundMe to bury him — a little less than $2,600 of a $10,000 request had been collected as of Sunday morning.

He left them with the paintings he did and memories of his singing and his sense of humor.

His extroverte­d personalit­y stemmed from a desire to brighten other people’s lives, Lugo said in the YouTube video.

“I try to put out positive, happy energy that charges other people up, that makes them feel good about themselves. Like, everyone should feel good about themselves.”

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