Toronto Star

Trans inmate wins right to move

Convicted killer will serve sentence at a women’s prison

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER— A transgende­r inmate in British Columbia has won a yearslong battle to serve the remainder of her sentence for first-degree murder at a women’s prison.

Fallon Aubee is one of the first federal prisoners to relocate under policy changes at Correction­al Services Canada that allow inmates to transfer facilities based on gender identity and not physical anatomy, said Jennifer Metcalfe, a spokespers­on for the West Coast Prison Justice Society. “It’s a really big deal,” she said.

Metcalfe is a lawyer who heads the organizati­on’s legal-aid clinic that advocates for transgende­r inmates.

“I’ve had a number of transgende­r women prisoner clients who have been held in men’s prisons and who faced a lot of day-to-day discrimina­tion, such as name calling and harassment from both correction­al staff and other prisoners.” Transgende­r women living in men’s prisons are also particular­ly vulnerable to sexual assault, she said.

Aubee, whose first name was Jean Paul, was convicted in 2003 for a gang-related killing that took place in Saskatchew­an 10 years earlier.

Aubee’s ex-wife told police in 1997 that Aubee and a man had killed Gordon Spears. However, officers laid charges only after staging an undercover sting operation entangling Aubee in a supposed crime syndicate.

Metcalfe said Aubee has been working for at least 10 years to transfer to a women’s prison.

“We’re just really happy to finally see it happening federally,” she said, adding that similar policies are already in place for provincial institutio­ns in Ontario and British Columbia.

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