American transactivist ( David Chester )Dana Rivers - who murdered lesbian couple and their 19-year-old son in hate crime - is 'preying on inmates' at women's prison in California
By Edward Era Barbacena
A white transgender triple murderer controversially housed in a women's prison has been accused of 'preying on inmates' while bragging about receiving 'special treatment' due to California's woke incarceration policies.
Dana Rivers, 68, who previously went by David Chester Warfield before transitioning to female, brutally shot and stabbed lesbian couple Charlotte Reed and Patricia Wright, before turning the gun on their 19-year-old adopted son Benny Diambu-Wright in November 2016.
At his sentencing last month, judge Scott Patton said the killings were 'the most depraved crime I ever handled in the criminal justice system in 33 years'.
But a 2021 California law allowing criminals to request their prison based on their gender identity has allowed Rivers to wreak havoc in Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla, California.
'Rivers has been a problem since he rolled in the door,' one inmate at the facility told the Washington Free Beacon. '(She) is trying to control the women, saying he gets to bypass everything — special treatment.'
Decades before her horrific crime, Rivers was a renowned transgender activist who made national headlines in 1999 after being fired from his teaching job for transitioning genders, and angering faculty by reportedly discussing 'sexuality and the importance of gender self-determination' with students.
After ending up in her chosen prison, which houses roughly half of California's female inmate population, the murderer has allegedly been terrorizing her peers.
Inmates have complained that she has been leering at the women to make them uncomfortable, while patronizing them and rubbing the outlandish transgender policies in their faces. As part of this, she has allegedly been forcing the women to push her around the prison in a wheelchair.
California has come under fire in recent years after the introduction of the lenient policy brought concerns for the safety of female prisoners. The move even led inmate Tomiekia Johnson to be fired from his job in the prison after she filed a complaint against the prison enforcing the policy.
'I think it's a slap in the face,' she told the Washington Free Beacon, claiming that another inmate told her the transgender killer had been 'staring at my butt.'
'As much as they know I’ve been vocal about being housed with predators, and how much they target me, and how much it’s a known fact that they harass me and provoke me, for them to put him in the building with me is beyond negligent,' Johnson continued. 'I feel betrayed by the prison for doing this.'
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