Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Transgender Woman’s Killing

By The New York Times (U.S.) | Created at 2024-10-18 01:34:15 | Updated at 2024-10-18 03:29:04 2 hours ago
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U.S.|Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Transgender Woman’s Killing

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/17/us/dime-doe-murder-south-carolina-hate-crime.html

The man, Daqua Lameek Ritter, was the first person in the country to be convicted of a federal hate crime based on gender identity.

A close-up photo of Dime Doe, who is looking into the camera and smiling.
Dime Doe in an undated selfie. A South Carolina man was sentenced to life in prison on Thursday for the killing of Dime Doe.Credit...Dime Doe Family, via Associated Press

Alexandra E. Petri

Oct. 17, 2024, 9:05 p.m. ET

A South Carolina man who was the first person in the United States to be convicted of a federal hate crime based on gender identity was sentenced to life in prison on Thursday for the killing of a transgender woman in 2019, the authorities said.

According to the government, the man, Daqua Lameek Ritter, fatally shot the woman, Dime Doe, after word spread in Allendale, S.C., that the two were in a sexual relationship. Mr. Ritter had pleaded not guilty but was convicted of a hate crime in the murder of Ms. Doe by a jury in February 2024.

Adair Ford Boroughs, the U.S. attorney for the District of South Carolina, said in a statement on Thursday that “from the smallest of communities, like Allendale, to anywhere in South Carolina where hate and injustice occur,” civil rights must be protected.

“We will continue to fight for the rights of those targeted because of their race, their religion, their gender identity or sexual orientation, or their ability,” Ms. Boroughs said.

In a sentencing memo, lawyers for Mr. Ritter requested that he not spend life in prison. The Associated Press reported that prosecutors had asked for a life sentence without parole, based on federal sentencing guidelines.

Lawyers listed in court documents for Mr. Ritter did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Thursday evening.

According to prosecutors, Mr. Ritter, who is from New York City, spent time in Allendale while visiting his grandmother and became close with Ms. Doe, who grew up in the town and worked as a hairdresser. Mr. Ritter sought to keep their relationship secret, court documents said. He did not want his girlfriend or the community to know about it and became “irate” after Ms. Doe publicized it, according to the documents.

Many of his friends mocked him, and witnesses said that Mr. Ritter threatened to harm Ms. Doe as a result, according to court documents. Mr. Ritter eventually lured Ms. Doe to a remote area in Allendale and shot her three times in the head, prosecutors said. Afterward, he burned the clothes he had worn during the crime, disposed of the murder weapon and repeatedly lied to investigators, according to federal prosecutors.

Mr. Ritter’s lawyers argued that there were inconsistencies in the government’s case. But after several hours of deliberation, a jury found Mr. Ritter guilty of Ms. Doe’s murder. He was also convicted of obstructing justice and using a firearm in connection with the killing.

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