Transgender Triple Murderer Sent To Women’s Prison

An infamous triple murderer who claims he is a woman landed in a California state women’s prison this month.

Dana Rivers, previously David Warfield, 68, was convicted in November of the triple murder of Charlotte Reed and Patricia Wright, a lesbian couple in their late 50s, and their 19-year-old son Benny Diambu-Wright, in Oakland, California, in 2016.

The bodies of both women were found stabbed and shot with a silenced .38 revolver, and the body of their son was found in the street with gunshot wounds. Shortly after police arrived, Rivers walked out of the house, covered in blood and reeking of gasoline. Police searched the suspect and found bullets and brass knuckles.

Rivers was charged with three counts of first-degree murder as well as arson for dousing the garage with gasoline and setting it on fire, an apparent attempt to destroy the evidence of the murders.

TRAs show support for convicted murderer Dana Rivers by assaulting women who were objecting to him being housed in a women's prison.

To clarify; TRAs support Dana Rivers, who brutally murdered Patricia Wright & Charlotte Reed & their adopted son, Toto ‘Benny’ Diambu-Wright. 😳 pic.twitter.com/6mmcA3aFN2

— gender is harmful (@genderisharmful) December 7, 2022

Rivers was initially housed at Santa Rita Jail about 40 minutes north of San Jose.

On June 14, Rivers was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Two days later, Rivers was transferred to the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla.

California is permissive when it comes to allowing trans-identifying male inmates to be incarcerated in women’s facilities. Since 2021, the state has allowed at least 47 male inmates who identify as transgender or “non-binary” to transfer to women’s prisons, according to a January report from the Washington Free Beacon. Female inmates who said they were sexually assaulted by their trans-identifying male fellow prisoners have sued the California prison system.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE DAILYWIRE+ APP

Women activists who oppose trans-identifying men in women’s prisons were outraged.

Activist Kara Dansky, who has been protesting Rivers’ potential transfer to a women’s prison for months, said she believes Rivers’ murders were a “hate crime” against the female victims, who were a married lesbian couple.

“There was something truly vile about the way this was carried out and his obvious hatred of her. My feeling from knowledge of the case is that he killed her because he couldn’t be her and he shouldn’t be in prison with other women,” Dansky said, according to the New York Post.

Amie Ichikawa, an activist who herself served five years in the same prison as Rivers for a drug deal gone wrong, agreed that Rivers committed a hate crime and said female inmates are scared of trans-identifying men.

“They get very anxious when a [trans-identifying man] gets processed in,” Ichikawa said. “Even when they’re post-op, if they get mad they go right back to angry man mode.”

Rivers has been in the news since the 1990s.

In 1999, back when he was David Warfield, Rivers was fired from his teaching position at Center High School north of Sacramento after he talked to students about his plans to undergo a sex change. Rivers told school district officials he was planning to have a sex-change operation and go on cross-sex hormones over the summer and return to teach in the fall as a woman.

District officials directed him not to discuss his sex change plans with students, but Rivers flouted that request and pulled several students aside to explain the situation. He even gave an interview to the school paper discussing his three failed marriages, alcoholism recovery, and his fear of rejection by students.

“I’m not some freak,” Rivers told the school paper.

Initially, the school board had written a letter to parents informing them about the upcoming sex change, but explaining that Rivers was a tenured teacher with a good performance record, so there was nothing they could do. After outrage from parents over Rivers’ private conversations with students about the sex change, the school fired him.

That wasn’t the end of the story, though. Rivers sued Center High School over his termination, which catapulted him into international news. A glowing profile by the Los Angeles Times at the time declared that Warfield was “the teacher who helped low achievers turn it around” before he “became a woman.”

In November 1999, Rivers resigned in exchange for a $150,000 settlement.

Rivers was thought by many to have become an enforcer for an all-female biker club called the Deviants, which was associated with the infamous gang Hell’s Angels, according to prosecutors in the murder case. Rivers went by the nickname “Edge” and had tattoos indicating he was a “1 percenter,” a reference to the supposedly small percentage of motorcycle clubs that are criminal.

One of the two women Rivers killed was a former member of the Deviants.

Rivers and the woman met at a Veterans Affairs Center, where Rivers, who is also a U.S. Navy veteran, was seeking mental health care. They became friends, and the woman had a short stint as a Deviant before quitting the biker club. The Deviants began threatening the woman, and eventually, Rivers killed her, her partner, and her son.

Now that Rivers has ended up behind bars alongside women, the women activists advocating for female-only prisons are continuing to fight the decision.

“It’s not over. We will never stop fighting,” Dansky tweeted.

High School Grad’s Body Found In Desert Bonfire, Death Described As ‘Malicious’

A Nebraska teenager who was in Arizona celebrating his high school graduation was found dead in a desert bonfire pile – a “malicious” death, according to authorities.

Parker League, 18, was found dead on June 12 in Bulldog Canyon, part of Arizona’s Tonto National Forest. He was found on the same day he was scheduled to return home, ABC15 reported.

“It’s hard to accept because he was the nicest kid in the world,” League’s brother, Hunter, told the outlet. “I got a call from my dad telling me to come home. I asked him ‘why’ about three times and the third time he tried to explain it, he just started breaking down.”

Hunter told the outlet that League was two years younger but considered his brother his best friend. He said League had traveled to Tempe, Arizona, to visit friends.

“I knew he had a place to stay; I knew he got there. We texted … that’s about it,” Hunter told the outlet.

League flew to Arizona on June 9. His last text to his brother was on June 10.

The teen’s family told ABC15 that they were not immediately informed that League’s body had been found, so they filed a missing persons report with the Tempe Police Department on June 15, three days after League’s flight had landed without him on board.

Hunter also told the outlet that his brother may have been targeted for his expensive watch. The family said they found two unusual transactions from League’s bank account.

“We basically found out that someone was using his debit card to get food and tried to pay their electric bill with it,” Hunter told the outlet.

Sgt. Joaquin Enriquez with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) told the outlet that law enforcement would increase patrols of the area where League’s body was found.

“I hate to hone in on this specific issue but, I mean, we’re dealing with homelessness. We’re dealing with just a remote area; we’re dealing with areas that can only be accessed by 4×4 vehicles,” he said.

Enriquez told 12News that he couldn’t release additional details about the crime.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE DAILY WIRE APP

“The information we have available for release is he was found in the pile burning. So as far as the other details of whether he was placed there, whether that’s where he was, those are details we can’t get into,” he said. “Only certain people know details of that crime, so they can’t be released to protect the integrity of investigation.”

MCSO described League’s death as “malicious” in a statement to 12News.

No arrests have been made so far in the case.

About Us

Virtus (virtue, valor, excellence, courage, character, and worth)

Vincit (conquers, triumphs, and wins)