Protestors will not be charged for posting photo taken outside of J.K. Rowling’s home
Author: Juwan J. Holmes
The three activists that protested outside of J.K. Rowling’s mansion and posted a photo online that included part of her home address will not face any criminal charges, police confirmed this week.
Rowling condemned the protestors in a tweet to her 14 million followers, equating their demonstration to rape and death threats and claiming they “thought doxxing me would intimidate me out of speaking up for women’s sex-based rights.” Two of the three activists deleted their profiles after, while one remains private.
Related: Wonder Woman Lynda Carter lassos JK Rowling without even mentioning her name
BBC News and NBC News both report that Police Scotland told them in a statement regarding the incident, “Enquiries were carried out and no criminality has been established.”
Comedian Holly Stars, actor Georgia Frost, and drag performer Richard Energy protested in front of Rowling’s home on the Transgender Day of Remembrance in November with signs that read “Trans liberation now,” “Don’t be a cissy,” and “Trans rights are human rights.”
They were responding to Rowling’s long history of transphobia, where she has repeatedly attacked the validity of trans identities, portrayed trans women as threats to cis women’s safety, and even promoted vile merchandise with anti-transgender messages.
Afterward, Stars posted a photo on Twitter from their protest, which showed the front of Rowling’s home — a well-known estate in Perth and Kinross, Scotland that she made headlines with by purchasing it in 2001. She eventually deleted the tweet because they received “an overwhelming amount of serious and threatening transphobic messages” afterwards, but noted they “stand by the photo.”
On November 22, the Harry Potter author made a series of tweets claiming that when the protestors took the photo, they were “carefully positioning themselves to ensure that our address was visible.” While she said she’s against people being “hounded on social media,” she then proceeded to post the names of the three activists on her Twitter feed for her 14 million followers.
Rowling said that she called the police, although she did not say what the activists did that was illegal.
“Perhaps – and I’m just throwing this out there – the best way to prove that your movement isn’t a threat to women is to stop stalking, harassing, and threatening us,” Rowling concluded. If there is any evidence that the activists she attacked were stalking, harassing, or threatening her, she didn’t share it.
Through representatives, Rowling declined to issue a statement in response to the news that charges will not be filed, NBC News reports.
I want to say a massive thank you to everybody who reported the image to @TwitterSupport. Your kindness and decency made all the difference to my family and me. I’d also like to thank @PoliceScotland for their support and assistance in this matter. 2/8
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) November 22, 2021
Over the last few years I’ve watched, appalled, as women like Allison Bailey, Raquel Sanchez, Marion Miller, Rosie Duffield, Joanna Cherry, Julie Bindel, Rosa Freedman, Kathleen Stock and many, many others, including women who have no public profile 4/8
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) November 22, 2021
None of these women are protected in the way I am. They and their families have been put into a state of fear and distress for no other reason than that they refuse to uncritically accept that the socio-political concept of gender identity should replace that of sex. 6/8
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) November 22, 2021
I’ve now received so many death threats I could paper the house with them, and I haven’t stopped speaking out. Perhaps – and I’m just throwing this out there – the best way to prove your movement isn’t a threat to women, is to stop stalking, harassing and threatening us. 8/X
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) November 22, 2021
Rowling “came out” as transphobic nearly two years ago when she wrote about her support for Maya Forstater, a social justice nonprofit employee who lost her job for attacking transgender people on social media and refusing to use the correct pronouns for transgender people. She sued and lost her case since the court believed that her actions could create “an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment.”
Rowling spent the next year issuing diatribes about transgender people, came out in support of conversion therapy for trans people, and claimed that almost everyone agrees with her, even as famous people that she has worked with condemned her words. She also published a book – under a male pen name – about a man who wears dresses in order to kill women.
Rowling’s anti-transgender views have been cited by Republicans in the U.S. to attack LGBTQ rights.
Actual Story on LGBTQ Nation
Author: Juwan J. Holmes