San Francisco Chronicle

Trans inmates near safer lockup option

- By Dustin Gardiner

SACRAMENTO — As a transgende­r woman, Jasmine Jones said California’s prison system constantly put her life at risk during the 17 years she spent behind bars by housing her among men.

Jones said she was assaulted repeatedly and raped three times in men’s prisons. Guards mocked her identity, Jones said, and forced her to undergo humiliatin­g strip searches that exposed her in public.

“They weren’t going to protect me,” Jones said of California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion officers. “I knew that for a fact. The only person that was going to protect me was myself.”

Advocates say Jones’ experience is common for transgende­r, intersex and gender nonbinary people in California prisons, where research shows they are raped and assaulted at rates far higher than that of the wider prison population.

They are urging state legislator­s to pass SB132 by Sen. Scott Wiener, which would allow transgende­r, intersex and gender nonbinary inmates to decide whether to be housed in a men’s or women’s prison.

Transgende­r is an umbrella term to refer to people who identify as a gender different from the one assigned at birth. Intersex refers to people whose sex anatomy doesn’t fit typical definition­s of female or male. Gender nonbinary describes people who have a gender identity that isn’t exclusivel­y male or female.

In most cases, the Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion now houses transgende­r and other gendervari­ant people in prisons according to their sex assigned at

birth.

“Trans women, in particular, are at such extreme risk of brutalizat­ion in men’s facilities,” said Wiener, DSan Francisco. “We need to treat them with the basic respect and dignity that they deserve.”

Wiener shelved the bill last year while the correction­s department met with activists and surveyed people in prison. The agency found that 52% of transgende­r, intersex and nonbinary people said they don’t feel they can safely report violence, harassment or discrimina­tion.

Correction­s spokeswoma­n Terry Thornton said the agency doesn’t have a position on SB132, though the final bill is the result of talks between supporters and correction­s officials.

“CDCR maintains a zerotolera­nce policy for sexual harassment, sexual violence, staff sexual misconduct and retaliatio­n,” Thornton wrote in an email.

She said the agency has updated several policies in recent years to create a more respectful environmen­t, including giving clothing and cosmetics to transgende­r people to match their gender identity and directing officers to address them with their correct pronouns.

Of the 102,000 people incarcerat­ed in California prisons, 1,078 are transgende­r, nonbinary or intersex people, according to the correction­s department. California doesn’t track how many of them have been assigned to a prison of their gender identity, though the correction­s department says it has fulfilled some requests from transgende­r people based on individual circumstan­ces, including whether they have undergone surgery.

Still, the agency has refused to move many transgende­r women from men’s prisons, a practice that transgende­r people say exposes them to attacks.

In a lawsuit filed against the correction­s department this week, a transgende­r woman held at Mule Creek State Prison in Amador County said her cellmate beat her with a blunt object when she refused his demands for sex, leaving her with severe memory loss and slurred speech.

The inmate, Fancy Lipsey, said she had alerted guards that the man was threatenin­g her, but that they told her to handle it “like a man” and to stop using her gender identity to “work the system.”

Thornton said the correction­s department would not comment on pending litigation.

Supporters of SB132 say the case is one example of the brutality that transgende­r inmates endure. In a 2007 study, UC Irvine researcher­s found transgende­r women in prison are 13 times more likely to be sexually assaulted than men, and 59% reported being assaulted while in a California prison.

Syiaah Skylit, a 30ye[arold transgende­r woman incarcerat­ed at Kern Valley State Prison in Kern County, told The Chronicle she has been retaliated against for reporting assaults or asking officials to transfer her to a women’s prison.

Skylit, who answered questions in writing, said the discipline has included “making me walk the yard with no shirt on or bra, exposing my breasts while in handcuffs.”

“If you express safety concerns, they ignore it until something happens to you,” she wrote. “The mistreatme­nt and neglect is endless.”

Transgende­r men in prison also report being harassed, though they may not want to be housed with men for safety reasons. Wiener’s bill would allow them to also select the type of prison they prefer.

Advocates say SB132 won’t eliminate the danger transgende­r people face in a system designed with narrow conception­s of gender, but it will reduce it.

“Our current penal system is very binary,” said Jen Orthwein, a partner at Medina Orthwein LLP, a law firm that has represente­d numerous transgende­r people in prison and helped write the bill.

“The intention of this bill is to help trans people survive prison, so they can be free,” she said. “Trans people are not safe in prison. There’s no underlying belief that this bill is going to make trans people safe in prison.”

A large coalition of transgende­r groups cowrote the bill, including the Transgende­r Law Center, TransLatin@ Coalition and Equality California, an LGBTQ advocacy group.

One group has been vocally opposed in hearings: Feminists in Struggle, which advocates for those assigned the female gender at birth.

Sam Esther, a spokeswoma­n for Feminists in Struggle, said the group opposes housing transgende­r women in female prisons, regardless of whether they have undergone surgery, because they were born and socialized male.

“Women are still suffering from violence from males,” she said. “People born female have rights here, too, and they are completely lost in the discussion.”

Under the bill, the correction­s department could deny a transgende­r person’s request to be housed with a specific gender population, if it can certify an “articulabl­e basis” for the security concern. The agency would be prohibited from denying requests for discrimina­tory reasons, including due to a person’s genitalia or sexual orientatio­n.

The department would also be required to consider other housing options, such as putting a transgende­r inmate in a single cell, with another inmate of their choice or away from an inmate they find threatenin­g.

A handful of states and cities have enacted similar policies. More states have moved transgende­r women to women’s prisons on a casebycase basis.

Wiener’s bill is on the brink of passage. The amended version faces votes in the Assembly and state Senate, where it must pass by the end of the legislativ­e session Monday or die.

Jasmine Jones, who was released from prison in May, said the bill would be a lifeline for transgende­r women.

She now lives in San Francisco, where she works for the Transgende­r GenderVari­ant & Intersex Justice Project, an advocacy group and sponsor of Wiener’s bill. She helps other transgende­r people find housing and jobs as they leave prison.

Jones said she constantly writes to transgende­r women who are still in the system.

“I told them all, ‘I’m not going to forget about any of you,’ ” she said. “I worry about my trans sisters in there. These things that I went through are still going on to this day.”

 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Exinmate Jasmine Jones says locking transgende­r women like her in men’s prisons puts their lives at risk.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Exinmate Jasmine Jones says locking transgende­r women like her in men’s prisons puts their lives at risk.
 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle ?? In most cases, transgende­r and other gendervari­ant people in California prisons are housed according to their sex assigned at birth.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle In most cases, transgende­r and other gendervari­ant people in California prisons are housed according to their sex assigned at birth.
 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Jasmine Jones works for the advocacy group Transgende­r GenderVari­ant & Intersex Justice Project, where she helps other transgende­r people find housing and jobs as they leave prison.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Jasmine Jones works for the advocacy group Transgende­r GenderVari­ant & Intersex Justice Project, where she helps other transgende­r people find housing and jobs as they leave prison.

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