Bereaved Mom of Yaeli Galdamez Blames LA County For Her Death

After her teenage daughter was killed in front of an oncoming train in Los Angeles, the mother of the victim has blamed her local school district’s transgender agenda.

In an interview, Abigail Martinez explained that her daughter was depressed because she had been tormented by doubts about her sexuality and gender identity for a long time.

However, rather than helping her daughter with her depression, the school directed her to LGBT clubs, told her not to speak to her mother, and in essence promoted transgenderism, as explained by the girl’s mother, who claimed the school was sued by the Obama administration for allegedly discriminating against a transgender boy.

I knew they wouldn’t work,” she told me. “They took her away from me because they thought it was in her best interest. “Where is my daughter?” I ask them all. “Why did they play with her life?” she asked.

Yaeli Galdamez

Yaeli Galdamez

A report says that the daughter was persuaded by LGBT activists to insist on being called Andrew Martinez instead of Yaeli Galdamez and died on September 4th of this year. Her death is the subject of a legal investigation.

The Human Rights Campaign notes that suicide attempts among transgender patients and those who have completed transgender treatment are not uncommon.

Over half of transgender male participants in the survey reported having attempted suicide, while 29.9 percent of transgender female participants said they had attempted suicide. A total of 41.8 percent of non-binary youth reported having attempted suicide in the past year.

After school staff instructed her daughter “not to speak to [her mother] about transgender issues,” the mother claimed that the Los Angeles County school encouraged Yaeli to take hormones and undergo gender reassignment surgery, explaining that the group’s members convinced Yaeli that she would only be happy if [she] became male.

According to the Daily Mail, the mother filed a lawsuit against LA County and its Department of Child and Family Services.

By the eighth grade, Abigail Martinez’s daughter was showing signs of depression, and “She was questioning her sexuality,” according to her mother. However, she was determined to discover her identity despite the shock. At that age, what child isn’t going through this?

She then described her disbelief at the school’s actions as her third and final shock.

Behind my back, the school had been encouraging her to join these LGBT groups.” From questioning her sexuality to gender, she shifted her focus. Peers from high school were two years older than she was. There was a lot of support from the school for these ideas, such as, “Maybe you’re depressed because you don’t feel like a boy?”

Social workers were alerted after the girl tried to overdose on pills and then attempted to jump off a bridge.

For the sake of her daughter, Jay’s mother agreed to call her “Jay” and buy her “masculine” clothing.

“All I wanted was my daughter back.” “No, no, no,” I didn’t want to be the mean mom. I wanted to provide her with the support she required at the time. Martinez told the pub’s owner, ‘I knew the haircut or whatever she was trying to do wouldn’t make her happy.’

Yaeli Galdamez

Yaeli Galdamez

Yaeli Galdamez

She claimed to have told social workers time and time again that the person in need needed help with their mental health.

There, social workers “coached” Yaeli into claiming that she had been slapped, according to the report. Yaeli was then placed in foster care, where she would receive state-funded transgender surgery, the report stated.

She said that the Pomona police department called within minutes.

“Around 9:30 p.m. that night, she walked in front of the train tracks facing a train. She went on her knees, raised her arms up, and just laid on the tracks,” Abigail Martinez explained.

An ex-civil rights director for the federal Department of Health and Human Services, Roger Severino, has been quoted as saying that the district pushed transgenderism out of fear of losing federal funding. He said,

Instead of working through the underlying depression, they put Abi’s daughter on a one-way track straight to transition and chemical interventions that would lead to permanent sterilization as a kid. Because the state took Abi’s daughter away, her depression got worse. And without having her mother’s love, she took her own life.