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Man indicted for fatal beating of transgendered woman Islan Nettles in Harlem

  • Paris Wilson was initially arrested for the attack and charged...

    Jefferson Siegel/New York Daily News

    Paris Wilson was initially arrested for the attack and charged with misdemeanor assault, but the charges were dropped when James Dixon (not pictured) was determined to have been the one who beat Nettles to death.

  • James Dixon is walked into his arraignment in Manhattan Criminal...

    Alec Tabak for New York Daily News

    James Dixon is walked into his arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court on Tuesday to face charges for the beating death of 21-year old Islan Nettles in 2013.

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She’s getting justice at last.

Eighteen months after the fatal beating of a transgendered woman in Harlem, prosecutors have indicted the hate-spewing creep they say killed her.

James Dixon, 24, was charged Tuesday with manslaughter and assault for the vicious beating of Islan Nettles on Aug. 17, 2013.

Nettles, 21, had been walking with two transgender friends on Eighth Ave. near West 147th St. when a group of men saw them and started catcalling them.

The catcalls turned into homophobic slurs and violence when the group of about seven men saw the trio were transgendered, police said.

Dixon then “abruptly” punched Nettles in the face, said prosecutor Nicholas Viorst.

“The back of Ms. Nettles head hit the pavement and it caused serious brain injury and also left her unconscious,” Viorst said.

The enraged Dixon continued to pummel the knocked out woman anyway, the prosecutor said.

Islan Nettles died after being attacked and beaten as she walked with friends in 2013 in Harlem.
Islan Nettles died after being attacked and beaten as she walked with friends in 2013 in Harlem.

“Her serious injuries caused her death days later,” said Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.

A man named Paris Wilson, 20, was initially arrested for the attack and charged with misdemeanor assault. The charges were dropped after another man turned himself in and took responsibility for the crime — but said he was too drunk to remember what happened.

The second man, Dixon, bears a “striking resemblance” to Wilson, prosecutors said, and both were dressed similarly on the night of the attack.

Wilson was in the group of seven, “but did not participate in the attack in any way,” Viorst said.

Dixon turned himself in days after the attack with Wilson’s mother after going to their apartment and acknowledging that he’d been the attacker.

He made a “series of statements” to cops at the station house, Viorst said. Investigators then spent more than a year trying to untangle who did what to the fashion company intern.

“Our office investigated this matter for a year and a half, judge, before we presented evidence” to a grand jury, Viorst told Justice Robert Stolz.

Paris Wilson was initially arrested for the attack and charged with misdemeanor assault, but the charges were dropped when James Dixon (not pictured) was determined to have been the one who beat Nettles to death.
Paris Wilson was initially arrested for the attack and charged with misdemeanor assault, but the charges were dropped when James Dixon (not pictured) was determined to have been the one who beat Nettles to death.

Dixon, a Brooklyn resident who’s been arrested 11 times before, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

He was ordered held without bail pending his next court hearing on March 19. His lawyer declined comment.

Nettles’ mom, Delores Nettles, told the Daily News she was “ecstatic” when prosecutors called her with the news.

“I’m overwhelmed and my God is good,” she said, adding that the long wait for action was “bothersome, troublesome…but at least now I can get a little closure.”

She also thanked the LGBT community for rallying around her daughter’s case.

“I’m thankful so much for them because without them I wouldn’t have support. We fought for what we wanted, so I’m very glad for that,” she said.

The slow pace of the investigation into Nettles’ death had drawn criticism from activists, who praised the DA’s actions on Tuesday.

“Finally an arrest in this senseless crime,” transgender “Orange is the New Black” actress Laverne Cox tweeted after the arrest.

Michael Silverman, executive director of the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund, said, “We are heartened to see an indictment in the case and grateful to District Attorney Vance for bringing a measure of justice to Islan, her family, her friends and the transgender community.”

Paris Wilson’s lawyer said his client was happy also — and relieved to be cleared in the case.

“He’s been living with this fear and concern that at any moment he could be charged again for something he knew he did not do,” said the attorney, Xavier Donaldson.

“His life was basically on delay.”

The DA said his office had “exhaustively investigated this case with the primary objective of making sure that justice is served for Islan Nettles.”

With Rocco Parascandola