• Celebrity Trans Activist Jeffrey Willsea, AKA "Xena Grandichelli" Is A NY Toddler Rapist

    November 22, 2024
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    Jeffrey Willsea (X screencap).

    One fondly recalls the days when raping a toddler resulted in quietus impromptu. The heinous crime, scarcely imaginable to the sane, is one of those rare occasions when otherwise rational people forgive one another for foregoing high-minded legal principles. Take out the trash, and quickly.

    Nowadays, perpetrators of the worst kind of human depravity sometimes find a reprieve in the trans community. Some even stumble into cultish celebrity. New Yorker Jeffrey Willsea, the gender dysphoric fabulist who selected the fever-dream moniker "Xena Grandichelli" for his feminine alter ego, is one of the latter.

    Reduxx, the groundbreaking, self-described "pro-woman, pro-child safeguarding platform", reported on Willsea earlier this year:

    As previously reported by Reduxx, Grandichelli pleaded guilty to 11 counts of sexual abuse involving a 3 year-old girl in 1994, and was initially sentenced to 19 to 59 years in prison, dropped to 5 to 15 years at a later hearing. Upon release in 2014, he was assigned to the sex offender registry and categorized at the highest level, designating him a major recidivism risk and an ongoing threat to public safety.

    Yet despite his horrific criminal record, Grandichelli became a highly-regarded trans activist and has spoken at top-tier universities since his release from prison.

    In 2016, Grandichelli spoke at NYU on the topic of incarceration and trauma, and led a workshop on trans issues for the National Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People of Color Health Conference. The next year, he was a panelist representing “women’s experiences of incarceration” at Columbia University, which houses a gender identity program staffed by at least one member and former president of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health, Walter Bockting.

    Grandichelli has also been presented with an Anti-Violence Project award referring to him as a “Community Hero.”

    Notably, he has also partnered with the Sylvia Rivera Law Project (SRLP) and was designated as a Movement Building Team member. In a letter posted to the SRLP website, Grandichelli describes how team members from the organization actively worked to recruit him while he was still incarcerated for sexually abusing a child.

    As of May 2024, Grandichelli is still featured by the Women and Justice Project in a dedicated infographic highlighting “The Incarceration of Trans, Nonbinary & Gender Expansive People,” this is despite a recent wave of media attention surrounding his history of child rape.

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    Such plaudits! A casual observer might surmise that degeneracy is celebrated in trans culture. At any rate, Willsea demonstrated an utter lack of self-awareness when he described his time in the penal community:

    "[I] break down crying when trying to explain to somebody what it’s like to be in a state prison or Rikers Island and to be physically beat half to death and raped, and misgendered and abused so much that you’re ready to take your own life.”

    Imagine going to prison for, say, sticking bamboo needles underneath someone's fingernails, only to suffer the same torture behind bars...and then, with a straight face, complaining about that unique pain to an organization that flies under the banner of "justice". The mind boggles.

    A glowing interview in Medium underscores the depth of left's blind love affair with the trans community. Willsea even gets LGBT dap for his mother's alleged participation in the 1969 Stonewall riots in Greenwich Village. If you think generating pity for a baby raper is impossible, read on.

    13-year-old Xena Grandichelli recalls standing in a noisy crowd, holding on to her mother outside Stonewall Inn. As the crowd turned violent, Gandichelli ducked to protect herself from the stones being pelted at them by the police officers. Forty seven years on, she is still fighting the battles her mother fought.

    Grandichelli was raised by Sylvia Rivera, one of the prominent transgender activist who led the Stonewall Inn riot with Marsha Johnson in 1969. One of the historic moments in the gay liberation movement, the riots was a direct response to the increasing police brutality against gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer, or LGBTQ community.

    Now, 60, Grandechelli is a transgender advocate fighting sexual assault against incarcerated transgender prisoners, and is angry with the Department of Correction’s decision to shut down the transgender housing unity at Rikers.

    “It is a very bad move,” she says in her baritone. [Ha! --Ed.] The Board of Corrections unanimously passed new rules that mandate Rikers to shut down the separate transgender housing unit to comply with the federal Prison Rape Elimination Act. Passed in 2003, law penalizes sexual misconduct in all federal, state, and local prisons and jails.

    It is the duty of media everywhere to expose monsters like Willsea. Spread the word.

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    The Manhattan is a new media outlet combatting the Leftist narrative in NYC. We love The Big Apple, we want it to succeed and prosper and are committed to revealing how flawed ‘progressive’ policy is ruinous. As crime spikes, the homeless crisis balloons, schools continue to degrade, and quality of life plummets, we’re determined to help effectuate change. The Manhattan will fearlessly chronicle the problems and try to offer solutions. We won’t shy away from issues, we will lean into them.

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