Los Angeles Times

Transgende­r case breaks ground

Justice Department supports hormone therapy for an inmate.

- By Timothy M. Phelps tim.phelps@latimes.com Twitter: @timphelpsL­AT

WASHINGTON — For the first time, the Justice Department has told a court that denying a transgende­r prisoner hormone therapy is a violation of the constituti­onal ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

Government lawyers Friday urged a federal judge in Georgia to rule for Ashley Diamond, a transgende­r prisoner held in state prison for violating parole on a theft charge. Justice Department officials said it was the first time they had intervened in such a case.

Lawyers for the Southern Poverty Law Center filed suit on Diamond’s behalf in February, saying Diamond had been living as a woman and had taken feminizing hormones for 17 years until she was sent to prison two years ago.

Diamond was sent to an all-male prison, where her women’s clothes were taken away and her hormone therapy was cut off, according to the lawsuit. It says she has been sexually assaulted by other inmates and has attempted suicide and selfmutila­tion while undergoing withdrawal from the hormones.

The Justice Department, which filed a “statement of interest” in Diamond’s case, has been increasing­ly active on transgende­r issues. It filed suit Monday against Southeaste­rn Oklahoma State University, saying the school had discrimina­ted against a transgende­r professor.

The Obama administra­tion has struggled with the issue.

After initially denying hormone therapy and other treatment to Pvt. Chelsea Manning — the soldier who was convicted two years ago for leaking military intelligen­ce files to WikiLeaks — the Army relented in February.

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