One prisoner in 50 ‘identif ies as the opposite sex’
Survey suggests 1,400 inmates are transgender – but are they conning staff for easier conditions?
ALMOST one in 50 prisoners is transgender, according to a survey of inmates conducted by the official jail watchdog.
Inmates at notorious top security male prisons such as Belmarsh, Long L art in and Wakefield said they identified as female or ‘non-binary’.
Transgender prisoners are allowed to choose whether they are kept in a male or female jail and can receive other perks, including showering alone. Critics fear that some inmates are falsely claiming to be transgender to win privileges.
The survey numbers are far higher than those published by the Government. Ministry of Justice statistics published last year found only 139 prisoners said they were transgender.
But extrapolated across the entire prison population, the new survey figures would suggest there are more than 1,400 transgender inmates.
It can also be revealed that special wings for transgender prisoners have been set up across the UK, while Ministers are still considering whether or not to make it official policy.
The MoJ is urgently rewriting the rulebook on how transgender prisoners should be treated as their numbers surge.
It is under pressure to stop transgender criminals being able to move to female jails after the scandal last year when rapist Karen White – born am an, Stephen Wood–sex ually assaulted two women behind bars.
A year ago, HM Inspectorate of Prisons quietly inserted questions about gender identity into the surveys it gives to inmates when it goes into jails in England and Wales.
For the first time, the questionnaire now asks all adults behind bars: ‘What is your gender?’ It gives the options ‘male’, ‘female’, ‘non-binary’ – those who do not identify as either male or female – and ‘other’.
It also includes the question: ‘Do you identify as transgender or transsexual?’
Analysis by this newspaper shows that of the 6,667 people questioned in 43 different pris- ons, 118 said they were transgender – 1.77 per cent of the total or about one in 57. In male prisons, the proportion of transgender inmates is higher still at 116 out of 6,263 – 1.85 per cent, or one in 54.
Within the entire 82,567 prison population, HMIP f i gures would suggest there are as many as 1,461 transgender inmates. Internal MoJ documents seen by this newspaper admit the number of transgender prisoners may have been ‘under-estimated’. Last night, the MoJ said: ‘We do not recognise t hese survey figures, which use a less robust methodology than our statistics.’
Ministers and civil servants are looking at setting up separate units for transgender prisoners instead of the controversial rule that allows them to choose whether they are sent to a male or female jail. But this newspaper has established that four such ‘clusters’ are already in operation in male sex offender jails – Whatton in Nottinghamshire, Littlehey in Cambridgeshire, Isle of Wight and the privately- run HMP Parc in Bridgend, South Wales.
An insider said: ‘ The term “informal clusters” refers to a wing where more than one transgender offender resides. There will be other residents who aren’t transgender on this wing.’
It is thought that as well as allowing transgender prisoners to spend more time in each oth-
‘The purpose could be to abuse women’
er’s company, the measure also makes it easier for staff to let them shower or wash clothes away from other inmates.
Sources say that five transgender inmates who had been in female jails have been moved back to male prisons in the wake of the White case.
A Whitehall source said: ‘We are reviewing our policy so that it strikes the right balance between protecting transgender prisoners and their rights, and the safety and wellbeing of all prisoners, including some extremely vulnerable women.’
Victims rights campaigner Harry Fletcher said: ‘It is a real issue that significant numbers of sex offenders are identifying as female. The purpose could be to continue abusing vulnerable women. It is imperative they are properly risk-assessed before any transfer.’