Listen to What Next:

Tweet Share Share Comment

Three weeks ago, a police officer walked into a hospital in Owasso, Oklahoma, and kept his bodycam rolling. He was there to figure out why a 16-year-old kid named Nex Benedict was lying in intake complaining about head pain. Nex tells the officer, “I just got jumped.” The way Nex tells it, it went down like this: Some kids didn’t like the way Nex dressed—didn’t like the way Nex laughed. And they wouldn’t quit. So, Nex emptied a water bottle on their heads. That’s when these other kids got violent.

Nex identifies as trans—uses “he” and “they” pronouns. But his family is still adjusting to all that. His mom, who is sitting in the room with him, addresses him as “she.” The cop does, too. But it’s all friendly. It almost seems too friendly. Nex and his mom don’t seem to expect much from the encounter. The cop openly discourages the family from pressing charges against anyone.

To NBC’s Jo Yurcaba the really telling moment comes when this police officer asks, “When you felt bullied, did you tell an adult what was going on here?”

“Nex says, no, he didn’t do that because he didn’t think there was a point,” Yurcaba said. “There’s not really a lot of faith from Nex in this process.

When he’s finished taking their statements, the officer says his goodbyes, cheerfully. He works at Nex’s school, so he’s like, I’ll see you later. Nex is a little funny here. He says, “Hopefully not!” But, this officer never would see Nex again. Because Nex died the next day. We still don’t know exactly how Nex died. Was Nex fatally injured in this school fight? A full report isn’t expected for weeks. But to many, those full results don’t matter. “At the end of the day, their friend is dead,” Yurcaba said.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

On Wednesday’s episode of What Next, we discussed what exactly happened to Nex Benedict. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Mary Harris: I want to introduce my listeners to Nex Benedict, but before we really get into it, I want to get on the same page about what pronouns we should be using for Nex. Because in newspapers I’ve seen they/them pronouns. In videos from before Nex died Nex’s mom refers to Nex using she/her pronouns. She’s since said, “I was in a process of learning and so I wasn’t using the pronouns Nex preferred.” And now I know that you’re using he/him pronouns. So tell me about how we should be talking about Nex.

Advertisement

Jo Yurcaba: This has been a very delicate line to walk in that we want to make sure we’re being respectful of who someone was as a person. At the same time, we don’t want to reduce them to a set of pronouns or to one part of their identity. And initially, what we knew was that some people said Nex identified as nonbinary. Like you said, the family went from using she/her pronouns to they/them pronouns. But since I’ve been here and I’ve talked to a number of people who are really close with Nex, they have all told me that Nex primarily used he/him pronouns and preferred that. And sometimes, Nex would say he used he/they pronouns, so either pronoun would be fine. But, at the same time, during the vigil, Robin Gray Ingersoll, who dated Nex on and off, said, “Nex uses he/him pronouns. He was transgender, and he was so much more than his transness.”

Advertisement

Advertisement

To me, it highlights how fluid these identifiers can be for all of us—and then, how much Nex was learning about themselves. Nex was a teenager. Nex was not fully an adult yet. And so, they were coming into their own.

Advertisement

Exactly. Nex was probably still figuring it out. It’s also really common among the trans community to use pronouns with certain people in your life, but not with other people. So, for example, at school you use one set of pronouns, use a different set at home, or you might not be out at home. And so that kind of fluidity is just normal.

I know you went to a vigil over the weekend to honor Nex. Can you set the scene for me of what that was like, and who you met there, and what they told you about Nex?

Advertisement

That was on Sunday night in Owasso at the Redbud Festival Park. There were at least 100 people there. Some people had driven from a few hours away. I know that there were people from as far as Wisconsin there. Everyone was holding candles. There were students who were visibly distraught. And there were a number of speakers. Robin Gray Ingersoll spoke, and a teacher that Nex had in eighth grade called Tyler Wren shared really powerful stories about Nex.

Advertisement

Advertisement

For example, he said that one of his favorite memories of Nex was every day at the end of the day Tyler would have bus duty, and he would go outside, and Nex from across the campus would yell, “I’m going to fight you!” and would challenge him to a fight over what he described to me as “cartoonishly absurd things.” One time it was, I’m going to fight you, and the winner gets to take Tyler’s Ford Mustang. And the next day it would be, I’m going to fight you, and, next year, if I win, I get to transfer into your class. Nex just had what he described as “a fiery spirit.” This was a kid who, if he saw his friends being bullied, he was going to stick up for them. He didn’t back down.

Advertisement

Advertisement

That strong sense of self didn’t mean things were easy, though. Nex lived with his grandmother, Sue Benedict. Nex called her “mom.” Sue said Nex was bullied for months before his death. Talking to other LGBTQ+ kids in Owasso, you heard similar stories, right?

Nex’s friends did tell me that they were called the F-slur. And then, they also told me that the N-word is just used casually, constantly, within their school, and there are no repercussions. The teachers try to ignore it. The picture they’ve painted is that if you’re not white and cis, they’re always these underhanded comments being made or you’re facing direct bullying, which doesn’t make them feel like if they reported anything that there would actually be repercussions.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Tell me exactly what we know about what happened on Feb. 7, the day before Nex died.

On Feb. 7, Nex was in ISP—in school suspension—because he had been caught with a vape pen. We know from police video and the school’s account that Nex, their friend, and three other students—at least, there may have been other students there as well—went into a bathroom of the west campus. And that’s where Nex told police that he threw water on these three girls after they made a comment about the way that he and his friend dressed. He also said that before being in ISP, he’d never met these three girls before, and they had been teasing him on and off. So in the bathroom, they make this comment, he throws water on them, and then he said the three of them jumped him.

Advertisement

The police have released security camera footage from inside the school that day. You can’t see the fight itself. But you can see the moments before and after.

Advertisement

We see the students in the video come out of the bathroom. There’s also video of Nex being walked down the hallway by a school resource officer, where you see him, like, sway at one point. Then you see the video in the hospital. And then Nex went home.

Advertisement

Advertisement

And then from a 911 call from the following day, we know that Sue said that Nex’s eyes were rolling in the back of his head and his breathing was shallow and his hands were posturing, which is an involuntary muscle contraction, which can signify a variety of things, but mostly some kind of brain-related problem. In the 911 call, you hear when the ambulance arrives, and then she gets off the phone. But we know when they took Nex to the hospital, he was pronounced dead.

Advertisement

We have this timeline connecting everything. But what exactly happened in the bathroom is what’s missing. And now we’re waiting on what exactly really contributed to his death? What was his cause of death?

At this point, what are the police saying about Nex’s death?

They released what they called preliminary information from an autopsy. And this is relatively rare in cases like this. Usually you wait until the medical examiner releases a full report and a cause of death, which also includes toxicology results. But in this case, police have released this preliminary information that found that Nex didn’t die as a result of trauma. And the lieutenant on the case, Nick Boatman, did say he did this to get ahead of national scrutiny—and that the medical examiner didn’t tell him verbatim that Nex didn’t die as a result of the fight. So, we’re still waiting on those final answers of what did next die from then?

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

To release a statement saying the death is not the result of trauma, but then to say that the medical examiner said, I’m not saying the kid didn’t die because of the fight—that’s a really mixed message.

Yeah. And Boatman also said that the medical examiner emphasized to him that they were waiting on toxicology results and that Boatman took that as “a red flag” and thinks that that means something will pop up on the toxicology results. And we’re trying to get clarification around why he believes that. We do know that the family’s lawyer said in their statement last week that they were independently gathering evidence and interviews themselves. It seems like they’re definitely troubled by what the investigation has turned over so far.

Advertisement

It seems like at the same time that Nex was coming into his own in terms of gender expression, Oklahoma was really battling politically over gender identity and how to handle it in schools. Can you explain what was happening at the same time that Nex was realizing who they were?

For context, Oklahoma right now is leading the nation in bills targeting the LGBTQ community. The Republicans in the state have introduced or rolled over from last session 54 bills targeting queer and trans people.

54 bills? What kinds of bills are we talking about?

Advertisement

Advertisement

They cover, a variety of things: transition-related care for minors, “religious freedom,” basically, anything related to schools, LGBTQ topics. Last year, three of those became law. There’s a law that bars school staff and students from using the school facilities of their gender identities; it requires them to use that of their sex assigned at birth. The state also passed a prohibition on transition-related care for minors, and then a law that bars the state from discriminating against religious entities if they instate anti-LGBTQ policies, for instance, if they don’t want to cover gender-affirming care or birth control or something in their health plans.

Advertisement

Advertisement

I can see hearing all of this how a student like Nex would feel under attack.

That’s what I’ve heard from queer students generally. Although they do note that it’s not necessarily new, that Oklahoma has felt unsafe for them the entire time they’ve been in school. I specifically spoke to a student who told me that in the last two years things have gotten much worse. Students will make offensive comments about her and her friends. She’s afraid to use the bathroom at school. So, it seems like the bills, from what they’ve told me, are definitely contributing to a worse climate for them in school.

Advertisement

But it’s not just what’s happening at the state Legislature making things worse. There have also been big changes at the Oklahoma state school board. First, a former history teacher, named Ryan Walters, took over as superintendent. Walters has said he does not believe trans or nonbinary people exist. And he’s made it so kids can’t change their names or pronouns at school.

Advertisement

Then, just a few weeks back, Walters appointed a woman named Chaya Raichik to the state’s library advisory committee. Raichik has only been in Oklahoma once. But she is notorious for her Twitter account “Libs of TikTok.” She uses it to mercilessly target teachers and school librarians she disagrees with, pushing an anti-queer agenda.

She also has tweeted about hospitals that provide transition-related care to minors. NBC News did an investigation that found 33 instances when people or institutions that were the subject of posts by Libs of TikTok later reported bomb threats or other violent intimidation. Raichik has denied that she’s the cause of that. She’s also denied any connection to Nex’s death and didn’t return our request for comment about it.

How has Libs of TikTok interacted with Oklahoma schools specifically?

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Libs of TikTok has had a number of interactions with Oklahoma schools. For example, Oklahoma’s Union Public Schools was the target of bomb threats for six days in August, which began one day after Libs of TikTok posted on Aug. 21 criticizing the elementary school librarian. The librarian has said online that she emphasized social justice in her teaching. And this has happened in a variety of other instances as well.

What is Chaya Raichik’s purview now in the Oklahoma schools?

What we know is that she holds this position on the library board. It’s not really clear how much power she has in that position. But Ryan Walters has said that the two of them have a strong working relationship. And I think it was specifically to get rid of “liberal woke values” in Oklahoma schools. So, she has a really strong direct tie there to the person who is in charge of schools in Oklahoma.

Advertisement

It’s been interesting to watch Ryan Walters and Chaya Raichik try to explain, in the wake of Nex Benedict’s death, where they stand, because both have basically said that Nex’s death was tragic and horrible, but that they don’t believe in multiple genders. They don’t believe in trans rights, essentially. It seems like a hard line to walk right now. Is the community in Oklahoma accepting this careful negotiation they’re trying to do?

Oh, definitely not. Everyone I’ve spoken to in the community, especially the LGBTQ+ community, here has named Libs of TikTok, Chaya Raichik, and Ryan Walters when they’ve spoken to me about the culture in Oklahoma and in school specifically. People are very aware of those connections and definitely look to those people in terms of what they’re saying now and what they’ve been saying and how it affects the experience of young people in schools.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Subscribe to What Next on Apple Podcasts

Get more news from Mary Harris every weekday.

View Transcript

I was watching footage of the Oklahoma state school board meeting that was held in the wake of Nex Benedict’s death, and so many people were speaking so clearly and loudly. An Oklahoma City Council member blasted the board for hiring Chaya Raichik of Libs of TikTok. They said she had blood on her hands after Nex’s death.

And we don’t have the full explanation of Nex’s death, but it seemed to me that people were incredibly angry, and it made me wonder if Nex’s story might prompt a change of heart for Oklahoma lawmakers.

Popular in News & Politics

  1. The Supreme Court Just Gave Trump Exactly What He Wanted
  2. Why Mitch McConnell Is Really Stepping Down in November
  3. Republicans’ Absurdist Ideas About Reproduction Are Coming for Us All
  4. IVF Is Headed to the Senate Floor. Guess What Republicans Are Planning.

That’s something I’ll be interested to see as well, especially as we’re heading into an election year. I’ve seen this happen two ways so far. There are people who say that Nex Benedict’s death is a result of what we’re seeing in state legislatures, what we’re seeing within Oklahoma schools. And then there are people who believe that Nex’s death is being exploited “by the left” and that this wasn’t a child who identified this way, but that this is an example of how the left is taking advantage of young people to push a specific agenda. So, it will be interesting to see if that is exacerbated, in the election year, or if there’s a shift, given that this is a child who died, to stop promoting those policies as much.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

I know it can be hard in the wake of a tragedy to have a clear idea of what happens next. But for these students you’ve been spending so much time with, what is it that they’re hoping is going to happen in the coming months?

Advertisement

The main thing that students in Owasso have told me that they want is for adults and specifically school employees to listen to them. Because the main thing that I’ve heard was that if you take a concern to someone within the school, then they will try to undermine it and they’ll ask, “Did that really happen? Are you sure? Are you just trying to stir the pot? Are you creating drama? Is this based on a rumor?”—to the point where the students question what they’re thinking, whether what they experienced really was truthful or if they’re overthinking it in their heads. And so, what they really want is for people to just stop and listen to them and take concerns that they bring to them seriously.

Tweet Share Share Comment

QOSHE - Will a Teen’s Death Cause a Reckoning in Oklahoma? - Mary Harris
menu_open
Columnists Actual . Favourites . Archive
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close
Aa Aa Aa
- A +

Will a Teen’s Death Cause a Reckoning in Oklahoma?

5 6
29.02.2024

Listen to What Next:

  • Apple Podcasts
  • Spotify
  • Stitcher

Tweet Share Share Comment

Three weeks ago, a police officer walked into a hospital in Owasso, Oklahoma, and kept his bodycam rolling. He was there to figure out why a 16-year-old kid named Nex Benedict was lying in intake complaining about head pain. Nex tells the officer, “I just got jumped.” The way Nex tells it, it went down like this: Some kids didn’t like the way Nex dressed—didn’t like the way Nex laughed. And they wouldn’t quit. So, Nex emptied a water bottle on their heads. That’s when these other kids got violent.

Nex identifies as trans—uses “he” and “they” pronouns. But his family is still adjusting to all that. His mom, who is sitting in the room with him, addresses him as “she.” The cop does, too. But it’s all friendly. It almost seems too friendly. Nex and his mom don’t seem to expect much from the encounter. The cop openly discourages the family from pressing charges against anyone.

To NBC’s Jo Yurcaba the really telling moment comes when this police officer asks, “When you felt bullied, did you tell an adult what was going on here?”

“Nex says, no, he didn’t do that because he didn’t think there was a point,” Yurcaba said. “There’s not really a lot of faith from Nex in this process.

When he’s finished taking their statements, the officer says his goodbyes, cheerfully. He works at Nex’s school, so he’s like, I’ll see you later. Nex is a little funny here. He says, “Hopefully not!” But, this officer never would see Nex again. Because Nex died the next day. We still don’t know exactly how Nex died. Was Nex fatally injured in this school fight? A full report isn’t expected for weeks. But to many, those full results don’t matter. “At the end of the day, their friend is dead,” Yurcaba said.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

On Wednesday’s episode of What Next, we discussed what exactly happened to Nex Benedict. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Mary Harris: I want to introduce my listeners to Nex Benedict, but before we really get into it, I want to get on the same page about what pronouns we should be using for Nex. Because in newspapers I’ve seen they/them pronouns. In videos from before Nex died Nex’s mom refers to Nex using she/her pronouns. She’s since said, “I was in a process of learning and so I wasn’t using the pronouns Nex preferred.” And now I know that you’re using he/him pronouns. So tell me about how we should be talking about Nex.

Advertisement

Jo Yurcaba: This has been a very delicate line to walk in that we want to make sure we’re being respectful of who someone was as a person. At the same time, we don’t want to reduce them to a set of pronouns or to one part of their identity. And initially, what we knew was that some people said Nex identified as nonbinary. Like you said, the family went from using she/her pronouns to they/them pronouns. But since I’ve been here and I’ve talked to a number of people who are really close with Nex, they have all told me that Nex primarily used he/him pronouns and preferred that. And sometimes, Nex would say he used he/they pronouns, so either pronoun would be fine. But, at the same time, during the vigil, Robin Gray Ingersoll, who dated Nex on and off, said, “Nex uses he/him pronouns. He was transgender, and he was so much more than his transness.”

Advertisement

Advertisement

To me, it highlights how fluid these identifiers can be for all of us—and then, how much Nex was learning about themselves. Nex was a teenager. Nex was not fully an adult yet. And so, they were coming into their own.

Advertisement

Exactly. Nex was probably still figuring it out. It’s also really common among the trans community to use pronouns with certain people in your life, but not with other people. So, for example, at school you use one set of pronouns, use a different set at home, or you might not be out at home. And so that kind of fluidity is just normal.

I know you went to a vigil over the weekend to honor Nex. Can you set the scene for me of what that was like, and who you met there, and what they told you about Nex?

Advertisement

That was on Sunday night in Owasso at the Redbud Festival Park. There were at least 100 people there. Some........

© Slate


Get it on Google Play