Shreveport Times in February. “Geri had done all the work and followed all the legal steps to transition including paperwork and ID.” She often attended marches for Transgender Day of Remembrance and other trans events.Chisum, who had known Judd since he was 8 years old and she was a teenager, recalled her walking with a cane in a 2020 march calling for justice for Vontashia Bell, a Black trans woman who was killed in 2018.
No arrest has been made in Bell’s death.Judd, whose age was not reported, was one of three confirmed trans homicide victims in the Shreveport-Bossier City area between October 2020 and October 2021.
The others are Brooklyn DeShauna Smith and Pooh Johnson.“Though it was difficult, Geri Judd made the journey of marches for trans rights using her cane in recent years to fight for her community,” said a statement from Tori Cooper, director of community engagement for the Human Rights Campaign’s Transgender Justice Initiative. “Her dedication to advocating for the trans community was clear in the way she lived, and her death will be a loss for the movement.
We’re so grateful to the advocates who worked with authorities to be sure Geri was respectfully identified in the investigation.