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Philippine court upholds guilty verdict on US soldier in transgender’s killing

Philippine court upholds guilty verdict on US soldier in transgender’s killing
US Marine Private First Class Joseph Scott Pemberton (C) leaves a court building in the Philippine city of Olongapo, north of Manila, on March 23, 2015 after facing the first day of his trial for the murder of transgender Filipina Jennifer Laude. The Philippine Court of Appeals has upheld a guilty verdict on Perberton. (AFP file photo)
Updated 10 April 2017

Philippine court upholds guilty verdict on US soldier in transgender’s killing

Philippine court upholds guilty verdict on US soldier in transgender’s killing

MANILA: The Philippine Court of Appeals has upheld a guilty verdict on a US Marine for killing a transgender woman nearly three years ago, a case that stirred debate over the US military presence in its former colony.
A lower court had found Lance Corporal Joseph Scott Pemberton guilty of killing Jennifer Laude in a hotel in Olongapo, outside a former US navy base northwest of the capital, in 2014.
He was jailed for between six and 10 years on a Philippine military base.
Pemberton had admitted choking but not killing Laude after, he said, he discovered that the person he was with was not a woman. He had been charged with murder but was convicted of the lesser offense of homicide, which does not require malicious intent.
In a ruling dated April 3, but only made public on Monday, the Court of Appeals denied Pemberton’s appeal due to “lack of merit.”
It also raised the compensation he must pay Laude’s family to 150,000 pesos ($3,000) from 80,000 pesos.
The killing stoked anger over the presence of US soldiers on Philippine soil after senators voted two decades ago shut US bases because of social issues, including crimes committed by servicemen.
The two countries are close military allies and the United States has for years led dozens of joint training exercises in the Philippines.
But the relationship has soured under Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte who says the US military presence makes his country a target for conflict, especially if tensions escalate between the United States and China in the South China Sea.
Duterte announced a “separation” from the United States in October, declaring he had realigned with China as the two agreed to resolve their South China Sea dispute through talks.
He has threatened repeatedly to scrap a series of defense pacts with the United States, but taken no concrete steps to do so, and Philippine defense officials frequently reaffirm the strength of the relationship. (Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales)