Federal prison inmate to get gender-affirming surgery: ACLU
A federal inmate has won a legal fight to secure gender-affirming surgery from the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, according to the woman’s lawyers.
Cristina Nichole Iglesias, who has been in prison for almost two decades for threatening to use a weapon of mass destruction, is set to become the first inmate in federal custody to receive the surgery, according to her attorneys.
“I feel so relieved,” Iglesias said in a statement. “I fought for so long to get the health care I need but wasn’t sure this day would ever come. Now, the federal government has finally agreed to provide me with gender-affirming surgery. This will change my life and allow me to live as the woman I am. Genderaffirming care is necessary, lifesaving and — for me and so many others — long overdue.”
As part of the settlement with the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, the agency agreed to provide Iglesias with “vaginoplasty” and “other medically necessary gender-affirming procedures, including permanent facial hair removal, facial-feminization surgery and breast augmentation,” according to ACLU Illinois, whose lawyers represent Iglesias.
“Because of BOP’s long delays ... any surgeries that occur after Ms. Iglesias is released from BOP custody will be paid for from an escrow fund administered by a retired federal judge,” the ACLU said in a statement.
Iglesias is housed in a residential reentry center in Florida and is expected to be released later this year.
Iglesias has tried for years to persuade the bureau to approve her surgery. She filed a lawsuit in 2019 while in federal prison in downstate Marion. According to that lawsuit, at age 12, Iglesias told her mother she wanted to live as a girl. In 2009, she tried to castrate herself, the suit states.
In April, the federal judge overseeing the legal case accused the bureau of prisons of treating the case as a game of “whack-amole” and threatened the agency with fines.