USA TODAY US Edition

Tenn. law protects transgende­r people

- Natalie Allison

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Tennessee has become the first state in the South with a hate crime statute protecting transgende­r individual­s.

State Attorney General Herbert Slatery, a Republican, issued an opinion Feb. 8 in response to a question from state Rep. Mike Stewart, a Democrat.

“A defendant who targets a person for a crime because that person is transgende­r has targeted the person because of his or her gender within the meaning” of the state law that outlines sentence enhancemen­ts for hate crimes, Slatery wrote.

Tennessee does not have an explicit hate crime charge, though the General Assembly added a hate crime factor in 2000 to judges’ sentencing rules for crimes targeting a person based on race, religion, color, disability, sexual orientatio­n, national origin, ancestry or gender.

Slatery’s decision affirms that transgende­r individual­s should be covered under law, but it must still be tested in court in a case involving bias against a transgende­r victim.

Stewart sought clarificat­ion from Slatery on whether transgende­r people would be covered after a discussion last year in a Senate committee regarding a bill filed by Democratic state Sen. Sara Kyle to add gender identity and expression to Tennessee’s hate crime sentencing law.

The bill failed to move but raised the question about whether transgende­r individual­s are included under the gender protection.

Stewart said that in light of the attorney general’s opinion, he would take a wait-and-see approach before suggesting that the legislatur­e alter the statute or develop an explicit hate crime charge.

“Let’s see how the courts actually utilize the law in practice, and let’s see how much protection it provides,” Stewart said.

Authoritie­s in Cookeville said in 2016 that they would not investigat­e as a hate crime a case that involved a transgende­r woman’s truck being set on fire after someone wrote “Trump” on the vehicle’s hood.

The Putnam County Sheriff’s Office said the vandalism did “not fit the criteria of a hate crime.”

Chris Sanders, executive director of the Tennessee Equality Project, an LGBTQ rights advocacy organizati­on, said the group worked with Stewart to seek the opinion.

“What we as a community were all telling ourselves was nothing could be done in Tennessee as far as a penalty enhancemen­t, if the perpetrato­r were even caught,” Sanders said of the case in 2016.

He said he is pleased with Slatery’s ruling and hopes it will be applied as cases involving transgende­r victims move forward with sentencing.

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