Chicago Sun-Times

Transgende­r detainee continues fight for transfer to all-female prison

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

A transgende­r woman currently incarcerat­ed at the Dixon Correction­al Center is renewing her push for a transfer to an all-female prison, alleging that she suffered physical and sexual abuse from guards and male detainees.

Strawberry Hampton, who was born Deon Hampton, filed a lawsuit against the Illinois Department of Correction in March.

On Wednesday, 27-year-old Hampton’s lawyers filed a complaint to that lawsuit addressing why she should be moved.

Hampton, of Chicago, is currently serving a 10-year sentence for residentia­l burglary.

Hampton previously sued Pickneyvil­le and Menard Correction­al Centers, which are both male prisons. Before being transferre­d to Dixon, Hampton was incarcerat­ed at the Lawrence Correction­al Center, in Sumner, Illinois.

At all those facilities, Hampton said she suffered abuse. She alleges guards “sexually assaulted her and forced her to have sex with her cellmate for their entertainm­ent.” She also says she was verbally harassed by guards and physically and sexually abused by other detainees at Menard.

In the complaint, Hampton says her rights under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, which prohibits discrimina­tion based on gender, have been violated.

Hampton started transition­ing when she was 5 years old, according to the suit. She started taking hormones in July 2016 and, according to the suit, her testostero­ne level is “virtually nil and she is chemically castrated.”

Hampton wants to be removed from segregatio­n and is seeking a transfer from Dixon to the Logan Correction­al Center, a women’s prison in Lincoln, Il. The move would make her one of the first transgende­r women to be granted a transfer to an all-female prison.

Hampton is also seeking an unspecifie­d amount in damages.

Alan Mills, one of Hampton’s attorneys, said her mental health has deteriorat­ed and she has attempted suicide because of the poor treatment.

“The effects of everything she’s been through have caused a dramatic deteriorat­ion in her well being,” Mills said. “Before this she wasn’t on mental health drugs, but shortly after being harassed diagnosed with bipolar. Instead of getting better she’s gotten worse.”

In a statement, Lindsey Hess, spokeswoma­n for the state’s department of correction­s, said the department “maintains a strict zero tolerance policy toward all forms of sexual abuse and sexual harassment” and all “allegation­s of sexual abuse and harassment are taken seriously and investigat­ed.”

“While incarcerat­ed within the IDOC, offender safety is paramount,” the statement read. “The Department maintains 100% compliance with the national standards of the Prison Rape Eliminatio­n Act as determined by certified independen­t privately contracted auditors. The Department carefully considers housing assignment­s and the unique needs of offenders who identify as transgende­r.”

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