Crime

‘We want us alive’: Is it time to make the murder of women in NC a unique crime?

Cristina España, deputy director for diversity equality and inclusion, from Governor Roy Cooper’s staff, embraces Mauricio Pérez Concha, whose sister was killed this year by her ex-boyfriend, following their remarks at El Centro Hispano on Friday, March 8, 2024 in Raleigh, N.C. The gathering on International Women’s Day, was to raise awareness to the increase in femicide in North Carolina.
Cristina España, deputy director for diversity equality and inclusion, from Governor Roy Cooper’s staff, embraces Mauricio Pérez Concha, whose sister was killed this year by her ex-boyfriend, following their remarks at El Centro Hispano on Friday, March 8, 2024 in Raleigh, N.C. The gathering on International Women’s Day, was to raise awareness to the increase in femicide in North Carolina. rwillett@newsobserver.com

Black and white portraits of women lined the walls inside the auditorium of El Centro Hispano on Friday morning.

Mauricio Concha Pérez spoke solemnly in Spanish about his sister Liliana, who was remembered in one of those portraits as a victim of femicide, someone killed by a former male partner.

“Two months ago, I did not know I would be about to go on a journey to an unknown and heartbreaking world, full of solitude, confusion and sadness,” he said.

Liliana Concha Pérez, 55, a Colombian-American and Durham real estate agent, was found dead in an office Jan. 9 this year. A man her family said was her former boyfriend was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound with her, media outlets reported.

For International Women’s Day, the Triangle nonprofit El Centro Hispano assembled a crowd of over 100, with a female majority, to call on Gov. Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein to support making femicide a crime separate from homicide.

This would make the killing of women in North Carolina a specific criminal offense with more severe sentences.

“At the first sign of violence, whether physical or emotional, please — the brother of someone who was killed at the hands of someone else is telling you this — seek help,” Concha Pérez said. “There will always be someone who will believe you.”

He recalled instances of the emotional abuse his sister Liliana endured from her boyfriend before she was killed. He emphasized that women must be made aware of potential warning signs of abuse from their romantic partners.

Onstage, more portraits of deceased women of diverse races and ethnicities were set up with purple candles and cempasúchil flowers, the kind used to honor departed loved ones during El Día de los Muertos, The Day of the Dead.

Among the victims were Hadeel Hikmat of Apex, Cristina Matos of Raleigh, Nabaruna Karakumar of Apex, all allegedly killed by men close to them in recent years. Guadalupe Carreño, who was fatally shot less than three weeks ago in Raleigh, was also part of the altar.

“We want us alive”

An online petition urging state leaders to pursue classifying femicide as a crime was shared during the event, which featured Democratic state Reps. Sarah Crawford and Maria Cervania, and Chapel Hill Police Chief Celisa Lehew in attendance.

“We want us alive,” said Pilar Rocha-Goldberg, the executive director of El Centro Hispano, who knew Liliana Concha Pérez.

“Femicide ... is the most severe and extreme manifestation of the continued attacks on women and girls, because of gender roles, inequity between men and women, discrimination and the existence of harmful social norms,” Rocha-Goldberg said.

Other speakers included a survivor of domestic violence and local crisis workers who said they need support to provide bilingual services to victims.

Cristina España, the deputy director for diversity, equity and inclusion in Cooper’s office, made a plea toward the audience in tears.

“This is painful, esto duele, (this hurts),” she said. “We just want to be alive.”

“Look around you,” she said, gesturing toward the portraits. “I’m going to embrace the pain. I’m not going to be silent.”

Laura Gonzqui, right, was part of a group of women who covered their mouths to memorialized North Carolina women who have been victims of domestic violence at El Centro Hispano on Friday, March 8, 2024 in Raleigh, N.C. The gathering on International Women’s Day, was to raise awareness to the increase in femicide in North Carolina.
Laura Gonzqui, right, was part of a group of women who covered their mouths to memorialized North Carolina women who have been victims of domestic violence at El Centro Hispano on Friday, March 8, 2024 in Raleigh, N.C. The gathering on International Women’s Day, was to raise awareness to the increase in femicide in North Carolina. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

What is femicide?

According to the World Health Organization, femicide, or feminicide, involves the “intentional murder of women because they are women,” with broader definitions including any killing of women or girls, especially by men who are close to them.

El Centro Hispano has tracked 51 homicide cases involving women in North Carolina linked to a male spouse, former partner or a man known to the victims.

Gender-based violence is a longstanding issue in Latin America. The term originated in Mexico and was spread throughout Central and South America to bring awareness to high murder rates of women and girls, compared to other countries and regions.

Chile and Brazil classify femicide as a crime, while people in other countries across Latin America and Europe have protested to demand laws to establish it as an offense.

Designating such killings as a specific crime in the state “means we understand that our society is changing; there are new needs and therefore, we must adapt,” said Joanna Kelley, an attorney who has represented the families of female homicide victims.

Kelley noted how assault on a female is a specific charge in North Carolina General Statutes, and said North Carolina could be the first in the U.S. to make femicide a crime.

Photographs of victims of domestic violence adorn the walls at El Centro Hispano during a event to to raise awareness of the rise in domestic violence and femicide in North Carolina, on Friday, March 8, 2024 in Raleigh, N.C.
Photographs of victims of domestic violence adorn the walls at El Centro Hispano during a event to to raise awareness of the rise in domestic violence and femicide in North Carolina, on Friday, March 8, 2024 in Raleigh, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com


If you need help

▪ The Durham Crisis Response Center offers a 24-hour helpline and offers various resources on its website at thedcrc.org/. The center’s helpline is available in English at 919-403-6562 and in Spanish at 919-519-3735.

▪ InterAct’s crisis line in Wake County is available 24 hours a day in English at 919-828-7740 and in Spanish at 844-203-8896. Find other resources on InterAct’s website at interactofwake.org/. Counselors are also available from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Friday.

▪ The Compass Center for Women and Families offers a 24-hour domestic violence crisis line at 919-929-7122 and offers resources on its website at compassctr.org.

▪ Orange County Rape Crisis Center’s helpline is open 24 hours at 919-967-7273. Other resources can be found in English and Spanish on the organization’s website at ocrcc.org/.

NC Reality Check is an N&O series holding those in power accountable and shining a light on public issues that affect the Triangle or North Carolina. Have a suggestion for a future story? Email realitycheck@newsobserver.com

This story was originally published March 8, 2024 at 5:33 PM.

Aaron Sánchez-Guerra
The News & Observer
Aaron Sánchez-Guerra is a breaking news reporter for The News & Observer and previously covered business and real estate for the paper. His background includes reporting for WLRN Public Media in Miami and as a freelance journalist in Raleigh and Charlotte covering Latino communities. He is a graduate of North Carolina State University, a native Spanish speaker and was born in Mexico. You can follow his work on Twitter at @aaronsguerra.
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