Last week trans-identifying Collin Bailey, who goes by “Mia,” was hunted by police as part of a double homicide investigation.
He was eventually apprehended, however, the whole ordeal sparked two major concerns amongst X users. One of which being the media’s use of preferred pronouns to describe the alleged killer.
The Post Millennial (TPM) reported that calling Bailey a “she” in reports sparked confusion throughout the Washington City, Utah, community.
St. George Police reports and media coverage described Bailey as a woman, adhering to a practice of referencing criminal suspects according to their gender identity rather than biological sex.
Police did note that Bailey frequently changes his hairstyle and sometimes wears wigs.
They sent a Utah neighborhood into lockdown, warning the community to not confront the suspect if they were to encounter “her.”
Police added that Bailey was “armed and dangerous.”
One notice from police on the morning of the manhunt read, “the suspect was seen heading west through the wash,” adding, “she was last seen wearing blue skinny jeans, light blue or white T-shirt, and has dark hair.”
“She is 5’10”and 130 pounds. We ask that those in the affected area shelter in place and call police if you see anything suspicious.”
Later that night police revealed Bailey was a “transgender male transitioning to a female.”
The statement included a mugshot where Bailey is depicted with short hair and another showcasing the suspect with long hair.
TPM noted that Washington City Police explicitly acknowledged Bailey’s transgender status in their statement, however, the subsequent notice from St. George police referred to the suspect using female pronouns while not specifying gender in its physical description.
On Wednesday, following the massive manhunt, Bailey was found.
KUTV reported that Bailey entered his parents’ house and shot them, using “she/her” pronouns to describe the suspect. He also allegedly fired shots at his brother.
Bailey confessed that evening to killing his parents.
TPM interviewed one resident named Kalsie Halls who reflected the community’s disorientation upon learning that the suspect was male despite initial reports identifying Bailey as female.
“I 100% thought that it was a girl that we were looking for,” Halls recounted to the outlet.
“So that night that it happened, I like, was okay, go lock the doors or whatever. And I told my husband, like, oh, it’s, it’s some girl that killed her parents.”
A neighbor of the Bailey family informed Utah pundit Eric Moutsos that some in the neighborhood had mistaken Bailey for a woman.
One resident even encountered Bailey during a morning walk but dismissed him as a random passerby, per TPM.
Bailey was arrested and charged with two counts of aggravated murder. He expressed no remorse about the shooting when speaking to police, bluntly stating, “I would do it again. I hate them.”
A second concern sparked online amid Bailet’s arrest: how long till this story gets memory holed by the corporate press?
“We need to have a national conversation about the epidemic of trans violence,” Libs of TikTok wrote Wednesday.
Raw Egg Nationalist highlighted another recent example of a trans killer that received little media coverage.
“Remember this guy? Jared Ravizza, the transgender nutter who stabbed four children in a cinema at the end of last month,” he said on X, accompanied with an image of the suspected culprit.
“Funny how his case just disappeared from the news,” he continued.
“Funny how it always happens when the regime’s pet minorities go just a little too far.”
The post Total Chaos as Police Use Preferred Pronouns to Describe Suspected Trans Killer Amid Massive Manhunt appeared first on Resist the Mainstream.
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Author: Jordyn M.
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