Murder Victim. He never knew his father, who died eight months before his birth. He was described as a tomboy in his youth and identified as a male in his teens; at times, he would identify as intersex. He was expelled from school without graduating. After his eighteenth birthday, he enlisted in the United States Army in the hope of serving a tour of duty in the Gulf War but was rejected after listing his sex as male. In 1992, he underwent psychiatric evaluation and was diagnosed with severe "sexual identity" and was admitted to an inpatient facility for three days on suicide watch. In 1993, he started dating an 18-year-old named Lana Tisdel. She did not realize that Brandon was born a female until December 19, 1993, when he was arrested for forging checks and was incarcerated in the female section of the jail, and his birth name of Teena Brandon was in the newspaper. On New Year's Eve of 1993, two former prison inmates, John L. Lotter and Thomas Nissen, who already had a history of raping and humiliating Brandon, shot and stabbed him, and despite emergency medical treatment, died of his wounds a week later on New Year's Eve of 1993. A week earlier, he had reported being raped by these two men to the authorities, but nothing was done except for the victim of a crime being treated as a criminal. Two other people in the household were killed during Brandon's murder. Nissen immediately shifted the blame on Lotter, and in return for a reduced sentence, he testified against Lotter at Teena's murder trial. Nissen was given life imprisonment, and Lotter was given the death penalty after being found guilty. The men were found guilty of one count of first-degree murder and two counts of second-degree murder. Nissen has since recanted his testimony, claiming he was solely responsible and Lotter was at the wrong place at the wrong time. Despite this, both of their appeals have been rejected, the most recent being on January 22, 2018, by the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2015, Nebraska abolished the death penalty, thus giving Lotter a life sentence. In 1999, the story of Brandon Teena was adapted to a movie directed by Kimberly Pierce entitled "Boys Don't Cry." Hilary Swank played Brandon, receiving an Academy Award for her performance. A 1998 award-winning documentary, "The Brandon Teena Story," told the details of this hate crime on American cable television.
Murder Victim. He never knew his father, who died eight months before his birth. He was described as a tomboy in his youth and identified as a male in his teens; at times, he would identify as intersex. He was expelled from school without graduating. After his eighteenth birthday, he enlisted in the United States Army in the hope of serving a tour of duty in the Gulf War but was rejected after listing his sex as male. In 1992, he underwent psychiatric evaluation and was diagnosed with severe "sexual identity" and was admitted to an inpatient facility for three days on suicide watch. In 1993, he started dating an 18-year-old named Lana Tisdel. She did not realize that Brandon was born a female until December 19, 1993, when he was arrested for forging checks and was incarcerated in the female section of the jail, and his birth name of Teena Brandon was in the newspaper. On New Year's Eve of 1993, two former prison inmates, John L. Lotter and Thomas Nissen, who already had a history of raping and humiliating Brandon, shot and stabbed him, and despite emergency medical treatment, died of his wounds a week later on New Year's Eve of 1993. A week earlier, he had reported being raped by these two men to the authorities, but nothing was done except for the victim of a crime being treated as a criminal. Two other people in the household were killed during Brandon's murder. Nissen immediately shifted the blame on Lotter, and in return for a reduced sentence, he testified against Lotter at Teena's murder trial. Nissen was given life imprisonment, and Lotter was given the death penalty after being found guilty. The men were found guilty of one count of first-degree murder and two counts of second-degree murder. Nissen has since recanted his testimony, claiming he was solely responsible and Lotter was at the wrong place at the wrong time. Despite this, both of their appeals have been rejected, the most recent being on January 22, 2018, by the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2015, Nebraska abolished the death penalty, thus giving Lotter a life sentence. In 1999, the story of Brandon Teena was adapted to a movie directed by Kimberly Pierce entitled "Boys Don't Cry." Hilary Swank played Brandon, receiving an Academy Award for her performance. A 1998 award-winning documentary, "The Brandon Teena Story," told the details of this hate crime on American cable television.
Bio by: Andrew :)
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