A transgender woman convicted of murder was put to death late on Tuesday in the first such execution in the US, officials said. <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/09/30/execution-date-set-for-missouri-inmate-who-killed-ex-girlfriend/" target="_blank">Amber McLaughlin</a> was pronounced dead shortly before 7pm local time at the Diagnostic and Correctional Centre in the town of Bonne Terre, Missouri, according to a statement from the state prison department. Local news station Fox2now reported that McLaughlin died by <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/09/14/alabama-wants-executions-by-nitrogen-hypoxia-what-is-it/" target="_blank">lethal injection</a>. McLaughlin was the first transgender person of either sex to be executed in the country, and also the first person to die by capital punishment this year in the US. She was convicted of murdering a former girlfriend in 2003 in a suburb of St Louis, before she transitioned. McLaughlin stalked the victim to the point where the ex-partner sought a restraining order. The day of the killing, McLaughlin waited for the woman — named Beverly Guenther — as she left work. Guenther was raped and stabbed to death with a kitchen knife. Her body was dumped near the Mississippi River. In 2006 a jury found McLaughlin guilty of murder but was deadlocked on what her punishment should be. The trial judge stepped in and imposed the death penalty. Such intervention is allowed in Missouri as well as in Indiana. Citing the fact that a jury did not sentence McLaughlin to death, her lawyers asked Governor Mike Parson to commute her sentence to life in prison. “The death sentence now being considered does not come from the conscience of the community — but from a single judge,” her attorneys argued in their clemency request. They also argued that McLaughlin had had a troubled childhood and suffered from mental health issues. Her cause had drawn support from high-profile people, including two Missouri members of the US House of Representatives, Cori Bush and Emanuel Cleaver. In a letter to the governor, they said McLaughlin's adoptive father used to beat her with a baton and even tasered her. “Alongside this horrendous abuse, she was also silently struggling with her identity, grappling with what we now understand is gender dysphoria,” the letter stated. The condition describes people feeling their sex at birth and gender identity do not match. Press reports said McLaughlin began her gender transition in recent years but had remained in the men's section of death row in Missouri. The Death Penalty Information Centre, which works to abolish such punishment in the US, said there was no known previous case of an openly transgender person being executed in the country. The issue has drawn more attention in recent months, with the supreme court of Ohio upholding a death sentence against a transgender woman and Oregon state commuting one, the centre said.