PDA

View Full Version : Intersex Woman in MA Charges Town With Bias


Betsy
09-28-04, 03:00 AM
<http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=46035>

Subject: US - Hermaphrodite horsewoman Patricia Renee Pina charges town with bias... [The Boston Herald - Sep 26/04]

Trouble rears up on ranch: Hermaphrodite horsewoman charges town with bias

By J.M. Lawrence

Sunday, September 26, 2004

Gossips in a small, bucolic town are ruining a black female horsebreeder's business by falsely claiming she's a transsexual ever since she launched a plan to house migrant workers in mobile homes on her farm, she says in a lawsuit.

"They really don't want me here. They're trying to drum me out and I'm not going to let it happen," said Patricia Renee Pina, 45, who opened the Aces Wild Farm and Ranch in Plympton seven years ago.

She's suing town officials and countered the gossip with a very personal declaration filed in federal court in Boston. Pina revealed she is a hermaphrodite.

"I was born on Aug. 15, 1959, with a physical condition characterized as, and commonly referred to as 'genital ambiguity,' " she wrote. "This problem was resolved in my early childhood. I am a woman of Cape Verdean extraction, African-American, who is perceived not to be a woman by persons in positions of power in the Town of Plympton."

She included a copy of her North Carolina birth certificate noting her sex as female. In an interview, she also noted she was married for 11 years.

Pina is 6 feet tall and her deep voice echoes across a clearing as she calls her sheep on an autumn afternoon. The herd runs to meet her.

"I've always been better with animals than with people," she says.

Pina once had 60 riding students and a dream to turn Aces Wild into a premiere facility with an indoor arena. She now has one student, has gone bankrupt and her former business partner withdrew his $600,000 investment.
The local feed store refuses to sell to her, she said, and vandals have shot out the windows of the trailers.

Town leaders deny discrimination is behind decisions about Pina's property. She was ordered to remove the trailers under a bylaw prohibiting mobile homes, said town counsel Leonard H. Keston.

"The town has every hope she succeeds in her dreams and aspirations which will be good for her and the town of Plympton. But she has to follow the rules like anyone else does," said Keston. He contends Pina's business woes began long before she was denied permits for the trailers and said she has never offered proof of the need for migrant workers to run her business.

Pina, however, argues the trailers are allowed under an agricultural exemption to local laws and two other Plympton farms have them.

Paul McDermott, a longtime Plympton resident, did some jobs on Pina's farm after other tradesman refused to work for her.

"That thing spread through Plympton about her being a he-she. That's what they called her," McDermott said. "Most of the other horse people have taken away her clients. It's almost like they're trying to wait her out til she just goes broke and they throw her off the land."

--

© Copyright by the Boston Herald and Herald Interactive Advertising Systems, Inc.

Sunshine1
09-28-04, 10:37 AM
Another story http://enterprise.southofboston.com/articles/2004/08/07/news/news/news07.txt

What type of hermaphrodite? a "true" hermaphrodite? with a mixture of ovaries and testes ( male and female) a "pseudo" hermaphrodite externally looks like one sex but only has the sex organs and chromosomes of another. Or was she just a regualr person that had a genital ambiguity for no particular reason and like many women with no conditions also has a deep voice? If this was an intersex medical condition what type of intersex condition does she have? If someone was a transsexual, they would pratice on not having the deep voice because it wouldn't go with the perception of themselves, right?

I feel bad for this lady and I hope it all works out but also I get the sinking feeling that this all somehow makes someone being a transsexual a negative thing and that's not true either. I've worked and partied with many trans-people and it's a great thing to look at your buddy and know that they are finally in the body presentation that matches mentally how they view themselves.

JustintheHood
12-12-04, 06:49 PM
I hope to update you, but am somewhat apprehensive. There is always two sides to every story. What is read/written is not always 100% of the truth. What someone might pretend to be is often just a cover in which to hide. False testimony to create doubt, fear and turmoil is the ingenuous path that has brought a dark cloud gathering over this small New England town and its residents.

Let me quote the more recent articles since 2002-2003, there is much more than this... :magic-2:

Animal Abuse Cases - Details

Neglect - 30 horses, 36 sheep - (Plympton, MA - US)
Crime Date: 11/03/2004
Case Status: Alleged
Accused:
Patricia Renee Pina

Case Report
State and local police on Wednesday assisted the Massachusetts Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the Animal Rescue League in executing a search warrant at Aces Wild Farm and removing 24 horses, three ponies, two foals and a flock of more than two dozen sheep.
In the search warrant for property at 59 Parsonage Road, owned by Patricia Renee Pina, authorities listed a violation of the state cruelty to animals statute.
The removal of animals from the farm, in several tractor-trailer-sized horse trailers, came a month after enforcement officers from both agencies inspected the premises with state Animal Inspector Glenn Harris after six horses there died within six days last month.
Pina said the investigators from the state have been at her house every other day since the deaths to see if she had hay and grain for the horses, and implied that the condition of her horses was a result of not feeding them enough.
After the six horses died, the remaining animals on the farm, including about 28 horses and a flock of sheep, were quarantined for 20 to 30 days.
The horses, when removed from the barn Wednesday, were thin, with withered muscle and some with rib and back bones clearly visible.
The horses were trucked from the property beginning just after 9:30 a.m. Wednesday and relocated while still under quarantine.
Pina said she thinks the animals were being taken to the Brockton Fairgrounds.
The search warrant allowed law enforcement agencies working together to remove the animals within seven days of its issuance Tuesday by Clerk Magistrate Edward J. Grimley in Plymouth District Court.
Trailers owned by the MSPCA Nevins Farm facility in Methuen, Holly Hill Transport of Marstons Mills, the Animal Rescue League in Dedham, and Brady Hauling, a local horse farm and hauling facility, removed the animals, along with two horse ambulances also operated by the MSPCA.
State veterinarian Frederick Cantor said recently the cause of the earlier horse deaths remained unknown.
Selectmen Chairwoman Christine Joy said Wednesday an unrelated pre-trial conference is scheduled for federal land court in Boston today in a case Pina filed against the town after she was denied a special permit to place mobile homes on her property.
Joy said the town questions whether the mobile homes are allowed on the property under state agricultural laws, as Pina claims.
Pina said she intended to use the mobile homes to house farm workers, and that is an agricultural use of the land.
Joy said the town attorney has responded to a motion by Pina's attorney requesting a speedy trial. Joy said the town's attorney rejected the motion that a speedy trial was needed.
Pina alleged in her suit that the town has acted in a discriminatory way because of her Cape Verdean heritage.
The barn housing the two dozen animals that were removed Wednesday had been modified by Pina with tubular fencing to shelter the horses in stalls, she said, were half of their original size, after she was told by the MSPCA and Animal Rescue League last year that she needed to find adequate shelter for all the horses.
Pina said she knew the stalls were small, but did it to comply with the order.
Pina said she called asking for help in October after determining that her horses were sick.
Pina also allegedly had three horses die last December.
Pina said her horses have been eating regularly but losing weight. She said their symptoms point to a neurological disorder.
Jennifer Flagg, spokeswoman for the Department of Agriculture, said veterinarians who have examined Pina's horses attribute their condition to negligence

References
The Enterprise - Nov 4, 2004
Boston.Com - Nov 7, 2004

RGMCjim
12-26-04, 12:10 PM
It's so much easier to take the focus off our own failings or outright negligence/incompetence by blaming others for being worse than us, or crying racism, sexism or some other "ism". to obfuscate the issues. It is also easier for the general populace to become racist, sexist and other "ist's" as an excuse to reject people who are different. In this case it looks like both of these things is true.

My life experience tells me that this matter is not about intersex, transex or gender variation, or even racism. It's about a town grasping at any way they can find to stop who they percieve as a domineering, loudmouth, bully who intends to expand her neglegence and inhumane treatment of animals to include humans ie. the migrant workers. It's about her trying to claim that she's a victim in order avoid facing the music over being a victimizer.
Those of us who are intersexed, transsexual, black etc. etc. would do best to disavow her - refusing her, or the Town to hide the real issue behind invented, contrived and fabricated "ism's". There are REAL cases of "ism's" to deal with.

Jim