@mridoneo: #pequeñosdetalles #bendiciones

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Monday 02 October 2023 18:37:24 GMT
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cristinagmb28
Cristina💕✨💫 :
Gracias Dios
2023-10-03 17:06:02
3
98clara15
✨️ Clara Ramirez ✨️ :
🥰
2023-10-02 21:37:42
2
saris17.03
santi :
Amen
2023-10-02 21:30:59
1
aureliorodriguezc0
Aurelio Rodríguez :
😌😌😌🥰🥰
2023-10-14 13:24:49
1
freddyguamanb
FREDDY :
Amén 🙏 gracias por todo DIOS mio.
2023-11-06 04:16:26
1
ivanchavec
IVÁN :
🙏✨
2023-10-15 20:16:09
0
alonzochef
Alonzo Corado :
Amen Hermoso Mensaje gracias Bro por compartirlo🙏
2023-10-16 20:48:58
0
juanacondori78
Juanita ❤❤ :
amén Amén
2023-12-04 00:19:48
0
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❗️On June 6, 2019, 17-year-old Nikki Kuhnhausen, a transgender girl from Vancouver, Washington, vanished after meeting 25-year-old David Bogdanov.  The two had connected on Snapchat and agreed to hang out. According to investigators, the night took a tragic turn when Bogdanov learned that Nikki was transgender.  Prosecutors said he became enraged and strangled her to death with a phone charger cord, later disposing of her body in a remote wooded area near Larch Mountain.  Nikki was reported missing by her family, and for months, her disappearance remained a mystery.  It wasn’t until December 2019 that her remains were discovered by a hiker, and Bogdanov was arrested shortly after, thanks in part to cellphone data placing him at the location where Nikki’s body was found.  During his trial, Bogdanov tried to claim self-defense, alleging that he felt deceived and threatened.  This is an example of the so-called “trans panic defense,” a legal strategy that attempts to excuse violence by blaming the victim’s gender identity. The jury didn’t accept it.  In 2021, he was found guilty of second-degree murder and malicious harassment, Washington’s version of a hate crime. In the end, he was sentenced to nearly 20 years in prison.  Nikki’s case not only drew national attention, but also led to legal reform: Washington State passed “Nikki’s Law,” banning the use of the trans panic defense in court. #truecrime #truecrimetiktok #truecrimestory #truecrimeusa #crimetok #crimetiktok #scary #scarystory #fyp  #CapCut
❗️On June 6, 2019, 17-year-old Nikki Kuhnhausen, a transgender girl from Vancouver, Washington, vanished after meeting 25-year-old David Bogdanov. The two had connected on Snapchat and agreed to hang out. According to investigators, the night took a tragic turn when Bogdanov learned that Nikki was transgender. Prosecutors said he became enraged and strangled her to death with a phone charger cord, later disposing of her body in a remote wooded area near Larch Mountain. Nikki was reported missing by her family, and for months, her disappearance remained a mystery. It wasn’t until December 2019 that her remains were discovered by a hiker, and Bogdanov was arrested shortly after, thanks in part to cellphone data placing him at the location where Nikki’s body was found. During his trial, Bogdanov tried to claim self-defense, alleging that he felt deceived and threatened. This is an example of the so-called “trans panic defense,” a legal strategy that attempts to excuse violence by blaming the victim’s gender identity. The jury didn’t accept it. In 2021, he was found guilty of second-degree murder and malicious harassment, Washington’s version of a hate crime. In the end, he was sentenced to nearly 20 years in prison. Nikki’s case not only drew national attention, but also led to legal reform: Washington State passed “Nikki’s Law,” banning the use of the trans panic defense in court. #truecrime #truecrimetiktok #truecrimestory #truecrimeusa #crimetok #crimetiktok #scary #scarystory #fyp #CapCut

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