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Published 13:56 IST, September 3rd 2020

LGBT group slams early release of killer in Manila

Protests were held on Thursday following a Philippine court's decision to order the early release for good conduct of a US Marine convicted in the 2014 killing of a transgender Filipino woman.

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Protests were held on Thursday following a Philippine court's decision to order the early release for good conduct of a US Marine convicted in the 2014 killing of a transgender Filipino woman.

The Regional Trial Court Branch 74's ordered for the release of Lance Corporal Joseph Scott Pemberton on Tuesday.

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Pemberton has served six years of a maximum 10-year jail term, mostly in a compound jointly guarded by Philippine and American security personnel at the main military camp in Manila.

In December 2015, a judge convicted Pemberton of homicide, not the more serious charge of murder as prosecutors sought.

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The Olongapo court judge said at the time that she downgraded the charge because factors such as cruelty and treachery had not been proven.

Pemberton, an anti-tank missile operator from New Bedford, Massachusetts, was one of thousands of American and Philippine military personnel who participated in joint exercises in the country in 2014.

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He and a group of other Marines were on leave after the exercises and met Jennifer Laude and her friends at a bar in Olongapo, a city known for its nightlife outside Subic Bay, a former US Navy base.

Laude was later found dead, her head slumped in a toilet bowl in a motel room, where witnesses said she and Pemberton had checked in.

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A witness told investigators that Pemberton said he choked Laude after discovering she was transgender.

The killing reignited calls from left-wing groups and nationalists for an end to America's military presence in the Philippines at a time when the US was reasserting its role in Asia, and Manila had turned to Washington for support amid an escalating territorial dispute with China.

 

13:56 IST, September 3rd 2020