The 17-year-old was having a meal on the floor when she was attacked with a butcher knife Sunday. Officials say they aren’t yet ruling out hate crime charges.

A man accused of stabbing a transgender 17-year-old girl with a butcher knife at Miami International Airport on Sunday was arrested and charged with attempted murder, police said.

Alexander Love, 29, was charged with first-degree attempted murder with a deadly weapon and attempted premeditated murder, according to an arrest report from the Miami-Dade Police Department.

Officers responded to Terminal J around 11:30 p.m. after reports of a stabbing, officials said in a news release. The victim was eating a meal while sitting on the floor when, officials say, Love attacked her without provocation, stabbing her about 18 times in her face, head, arms, shoulders, neck and legs before he tried to throw her over a safety retaining glass, officials said.

    • frickineh@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Thank god for the TSA, keeping us all safe from 4oz of shampoo and water bottles, though, right?

      • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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        I’m so f’n tired of this shit. Bonus tired for bringing up the tsa low hanging fruit in an area they don’t even check. I’m not a tsa fanboy, but does nobody here remember security before 9/11? You understand that the reason for liquid limitation is that the combined amount allowed was determined to be less likely to be able to take down an airplane if used to make a multi-part explosive?

        The contractors hired by the airlines? All the people they couldn’t re-hire on to the tsa because of criminal histories they’d lied about when applying to the tsa after having worked contract security for the airlines? Lucky if they spoke English? All the ones with fake green cards and the like?

        Y’all think that was stellar security? Want privatization so we can go back to security where the bottom line is always the focus, your demise is an acceptable risk at some point when calculated on a quarterly report spreadsheet?

        Downvote me to shit, but there is no perfect system. This system is a damn sight better than what came before, and while some might call the tsa “security theater”, the predecessor was barely better than amusement park bag checks.

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          That’s cool and all, but they fail to detect weapons all the time. Just because airport security has never been good doesn’t mean we can’t be critical of them now. They constantly implement new procedures that just plain don’t work beyond making air travel an even bigger hassle. I don’t think Lemmy users are big on privatization ever, and no one suggested that, but this kind of failure is a pretty big deal. Our demise is still an acceptable risk, except now it’s because they hire people who don’t give one single rat’s ass, pay them poorly, and use all kinds of things that look great on the surface but aren’t effective at preventing a guy from bringing a butcher knife into the airport (at what’s usually a pretty slow time of night) and very nearly succeeding at murdering someone.

          • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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            Like I said, there is no perfect system. People are people and they fuck up. All the time. For some reason we have this really messed up idea in our heads that when we place people in certain positions we expect perfection. Doctors. Pilots. TSA. Whoever. Zero mistakes. But that’s not what happens, is it? There’s plenty of bad doctors. There’s an unfortunate number of doctors that fuck up. Same with pilots. Same with the TSA. Have a doctor do thousands of operations in a day. See how many mistakes they make. How many patients suffer for it? How many planes crash, or just screw up in ways that don’t result in death but break through some serious safety barriers?

            It’s really messed up that we put people in positions and expect perfection, an impossibility, and then criticize them harshly for failure. The only way IMO to deal with this is to strive for improvement while understanding that people are just humans.

            I get mocking the TSA. I deal with them every day I go to work. Yeah, it’s frustrating. The rules seem arbitrary and ineffective. But the only way I can balance this is that we need to compare it to what we had before and look at what we’re willing to implement (and pay for) to improve the system. I never hear of anyone with any decent suggestions, so I get tired of people removeding when they have nothing useful to offer.

            E: ironic lol that I said “zero mistakes” while immediately promptly misspelling “mistakes”.

            • 9bananas@lemmy.world
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              the TSA is not “not perfect”; they’re a joke.

              it’s pure theater. they have basically no ability to detect actual weapons at all, hence why it’s a common problem when passengers arrive abroad only to find out they accidentally carried loose ammunition across borders.

              there’s a huge difference between “not quite perfect” and “completely and utterly useless waste of time, money, and resources”, the latter of which describes the TSA.

              IF they actually did anything useful at all, then fine, you have a point. but they don’t, which is why people are disagreeing with you.

              because in principle you’re right, that security is required and should be taken seriously…but the TSA isn’t actually providing security. they’re providing the appearance of security.

        • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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          Security theater is worse than no security at all because neither provides you protection while security theater has additional hassle.

    • mad_asshatter@lemmy.world
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      By walking through the front doors, as at most airports in the world.
      You realize walking into an airport is no different than walking into a mall?

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        You realize walking into an airport is no different than walking into a mall?

        I haven’t been to an airport in years where food was available outside the secure side.

        • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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          I’ve never been in an airport that didnt have at least a food court, much less several branded restaurants, available in the general pre-security areas.

        • mad_asshatter@lemmy.world
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          So, what do non-passengers eat while they’re waiting?
          Bus drivers, limo operators, other services?
          They do what?

          Toronto Pearson, Terminal 1

          NOTE - Before Security

          Top of my head, Pearson, both terminals BEFORE security: Terminal 3: Subway, A&W, Freshíí, 3 Tim Hortons
          Terminal 1: 4 Tims, Swiss Chalet, KFC, McD’s…

          I’ve been there over 3,000 times.

  • JimmyBigSausage@lemm.ee
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    When I was younger a man joined our church and decided to teach Sunday school. He one day attacked a girl just after his class finished and did it as a church service was going on and fled carrying the knife through the congregation up the aisle out the front door. This made me remember this for some reason.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    Officers responded to Terminal J around 11:30 p.m. after reports of a stabbing, officials said in a news release. The victim was eating a meal while sitting on the floor when, officials say, Love attacked her without provocation, stabbing her about 18 times in her face, head, arms, shoulders, neck and legs before he tried to throw her over a safety retaining glass, officials said.

    “The victim was able to escape the attack and ran down the stairs to the third-floor level, which is where the officers found her,” police said.

    Airports that late are just creepy in general considering how empty they are. I’ve been in them and rarely seen anyone beyond a handful of passengers and some janitors in those concourses when I was waiting for a late night flight. I could absolutely see someone being attacked in one for any number of reasons. I’m glad she was able to escape and he was caught.

      • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        The article says “officers responded to [an incident in] terminal J”. Every airport I’ve ever seen, large and small, have had the terminal behind security.

        • JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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          The terminal includes everything from check in to baggage pick up, before and after security, and often includes a food court and shops that are before security.

          Maybe you’re thinking of the “gate area” of the terminal? That’s behind security.

          • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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            and often includes a food court and shops that are before security.

            It’s been years since I’ve seen any food or retail on temperature non-secure side of any airport.

          • ieatpillowtags@lemm.ee
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            Dulles International has a single security and check in area, with all terminals behind security. They may be more familiar with a similarly configured airport

          • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            The baggage check area often leads to multiple lettered sections with collections of gates.

            If the terminal is all of it, what is the letter designated collection of gates called?

              • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                The buildings that provide access to the airplanes (via gates) are typically called concourses. However, the terms “terminal” and “concourse” are sometimes used interchangeably, depending on the configuration of the airport.

                So it seems the final answer from Wikipedia is that a terminal is the whole thing, and a collection of gates is a concourse, but a concourse is also a terminal, even though the concourse is in the terminal, which means that terminals are in terminals, and the rate at which an airport grows large enough for their concourses to be terminals is called the “terminal velocity”.

                Did I miss anything?

                • JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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                  are sometimes used interchangeably

                  Maybe it’s a regional thing.

                  I did forget the word concourse though. I wouldn’t use it in casual conversation.

        • mad_asshatter@lemmy.world
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          Are you claiming that there are metal detectors and agents at every single entrance at every airport you’ve been in?
          Are you confused as to what a terminal is?

          • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Maybe I should have started all this by saying I’m not an airport expert. I’m a dude who has flown on planes before.

            I’ve always understood the terminal to be the waiting area that the plane pulls up too—in other words, the journey terminates at the terminal gate. Yes, I have only ever seen that area assessable after you’ve passed security—at least it’s been that way post 9/11.

            If there is some nuance here where a terminal includes some parts outside of security, just say that. The tone I perceive in your post seems to be trying to make me look like a fool, and I don’t appreciate it.

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    Officials said that at the police station, Love admitted to being involved in the attack and said he had become acquainted with the victim beforehand.

    “The defendant added he was possibly drugged and someone inserted an unknown object in his rectum,” the report says. “Although the defendant is not certain the victim is responsible for this, the defendant made a statement indicating he needed to hurt whoever hurt him and was prompted to purchase the knife at a Target store near Miami International Airport.”

    • Apytele@sh.itjust.works
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      “The defendant added he was possibly drugged and someone inserted an unknown object in his rectum,” the report says. “Although the defendant is not certain the victim is responsible for this, the defendant made a statement indicating he needed to hurt whoever hurt him and was prompted to purchase the knife at a Target store near Miami International Airport.”

      Ah yes, the good ol’ transphobic psychosis combo (it’s actually more common than you’d think, mental illness can showcase some hidden inner prejudices that people normally mask better in some pretty ugly ways). Those biases are really deeply interwoven into our society and they often worm their way right into those that are already psychologically vulnerable, then they wind up featuring strongly in delusions and hallucinations.

      It can also be genuinely trauma related, a lot of my patients have been bouncing between the street, correctional and psychiatric institutions, and shelters, any one of which a sexual assault can and is often even likely to happen in. Traumas are another thing that frequently pop up in people’s hallucinations and delusions.

      One time we had a newly admitted patient literally covering their clenched butt with their hands while waddling down the hall and looking around suspiciously. It was kind of humorous to watch but in that dark, sad way that hospital shit gets sometimes.

      • Lumelore (She/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Yeah, I’m trans and I have an aunt with schizophrenia. After I came out she started behaving very strangely whenever I am around. For example, she doesn’t call me by my name or my deadname, and instead makes up strange nonsense words that she calls me. Then she gets angry when someone tries to correct her. I only see her at holidays and I always dread going whenever she has been invited because she makes me very uncomfortable.

  • frustrated_phagocytosis@fedia.io
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    I’m pretty concerned that a 17 year old needing to live at the airport doesn’t cause much more uproar, and that many more people are living at airports in places like Miami.

    • grysbok@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Could be traveling and was dropped off at the terminal too early to be allowed through security. I’ve done that—got dropped off at Logan airport at 9 pm for my 6 am flight. It’s when I could catch a ride. Ended up sleeping in shifts with some other college students in the same boat, all heading home for winter break.

    • Pandemanium@lemm.ee
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      If you have an international layover, you have to go through customs and then recheck your bags and go through security again. Airlines now (not sure if this is some or all of them, or how long this has been policy) will only let you check your bag within 4 hours of your departing flight. So one time I had an 8 hour layover, where I couldn’t get back into the airport for 4 hours.