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2 Guilty of Killing Transgender Teen

The men bludgeoned and choked Gwen Araujo after accusing her of deceiving them about her biological identification.

September 13, 2005|John M. Glionna, Times Staff Writer

A Bay Area jury on Monday convicted two men of second-degree murder for killing transgender teenager Gwen Araujo at a party in October 2002 after they accused the 17-year-old of deceiving them into believing she was biologically female.

Michael Magidson and Jose Merel, both 25, face mandatory sentences of 15 years to life in prison, but were cleared of hate-crime charges in the killing.


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Alameda County Superior Court Judge Harry R. Sheppard declared a mistrial for a third man, Jason Cazares, after the jury announced it was deadlocked -- the second time a jury was unable to reach a verdict involving the 25-year-old.

Jaron Nabors, a fourth defendant who was also present the night Araujo died, previously pleaded guilty to manslaughter in exchange for testifying against the others.

When the verdicts were read about 3 p.m., Araujo's 22-year-old sister sobbed, said the victim's mother, Sylvia Guerrero, who squeezed her daughter's hand.

"I was a little surprised, but I felt good," she said later. "Two second-degree murder convictions, what more can you ask for? Nothing is going to bring Gwen back."

Attorneys for the three defendants could not be reached Monday.

But transgender advocates hailed Monday's verdicts. "This is a huge step in finding closure for the family and friends of Gwen Araujo," said Christopher Daley, director of the Transgender Law Center in San Francisco. Others said the verdicts were unsatisfactory.

"Only some justice has been done," said Thom Lynch, executive director of the San Francisco Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Community Center. "The idea that hate was not a factor and that one person still walks free is just unimaginable."

Lynch said the jury had an opportunity to send a message that this kind of activity would not be tolerated.

"Unfortunately," he said, "that message did not get sent."

In the early hours of Oct. 4, 2002, after a night of heavy drinking, Magidson, Cazares and Merel confronted Araujo about her true biological identification, according to court testimony. Magidson and Merel had previously had sex with the teen.

Araujo, who lived as a girl and assumed the name of her favorite pop singer, Gwen Stefani, was attacked inside a dingy tract house in Newark, on the southern end of San Francisco Bay.

The victim was kicked and beaten with a soup can and an iron skillet, bludgeoned with a shovel and choked with a rope. Just before dawn, the three suspects allegedly buried Araujo near a secluded campsite in the Sierra foothills before ordering breakfast at a nearby McDonald's.

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