By Ryan Burns
Chloe's Legacy
Mourning parents hope to educate through the suicide of their teenage transgender daughter
http://www.northcoastjournal.com/news/2010/10/14/chloes-legacy/(Oct. 14, 2010) On the Friday before Labor Day weekend, Karin Fresnel was on her weekly shopping trip at the Eureka Co-op when she noticed that she was being watched — first while standing in the beer aisle, then again at the meat counter. Finally, the petite, blond-haired woman who'd been following her through the store stepped forward and said, "Can I ask you a personal question?"
"My first thought was, 'I've been clocked,'" Fresnel told the Journal last week. As a transgender woman, such confrontations are common. Not three days earlier a stranger on the street had called her "an abomination in the eyes of God." So, fearing the worst, Fresnel drew herself up to her full height (six-three in heels) and answered, "Yes, you may, and yes, I'm trans."