Two transgender women sexually assaulted in male prisons

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Two transgender women have been sexually assaulted while behind bars in male prisons.

Despite official guidance that states transgender women should not be placed in male general population, trans women in the UK are frequently forced to serve time in men’s prisons.

According to reports, police are investigating two sexual assaults on trans women that took place in at HM Prison Littlehey, a Category C male sex offenders prison in Cambridgeshire.

Prison
Prison

According to The Sun, one of the women was sexually assaulted in her cell on September 3, while the second was propositioned by another prisoner and asked to perform a sex act.

A source told the newspaper: “Two allegations of very serious sexual assault in a short period is unprecedented.

“The prison is investigating and considering changes to the way it deals with transgender inmates.”

A Ministry of Justice official said: “It would be inappropriate to comment further while investigations are ongoing.”

Two transgender women sexually assaulted in male prisons

In 2015, the government carried out a review the way trans people in prisons are dealt with, after two female prisoners died within weeks of each-other while being held in all-male facilities.

A third prisoner, Tara Hudson, was moved to a female facility after a public campaign.

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The review, overseen by Peter Dawson of the Prison Reform Trust and Jay Stewart of Gendered Intelligence, led to reforms to National Offender Management Service procedures.

It directs: “People who are living in a gender different to that of their assigned sex at birth should, as a general presumption, be treated by offender management services according to the gender in which they identify.

“Clear, reasonable criteria should be applied from the outset for all transgender people who receive a binary (i.e. either a male or female) service from NOMS, where it is required.

“This process should be free from bias, follow a clear, recorded process and be undertaken by staff who have a sound basic awareness of transgender identity, with access to specialist advice.”

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Two transgender women sexually assaulted in male prisons

However, despite the guidance, campaigners say little has changed – and there are still a number of trans women serving time in male prisons.

The NOMS document states that trans women can be sent to men’s prisons if there is a ‘lack of evidence’ of their gender identity or if they are judged to be a threat.

It states: “There will be circumstances when a transgender person’s location cannot be straightforwardly reconciled with their views.

“This may be due to a lack of evidence (or the presence of counter evidence) relating to the gender in which they identify and/or concerns raised via an assessment of all known risks, indicating they cannot be safely managed in a prison that does match their self-identified gender.

“Guidance on how NOMS staff weigh evidence and risk should accompany any new instruction.

“Decisions on the allocation of transgender people to binary services, especially custody, must include the possibility of a review and rapid remedy if it appears that the initial allocation might have an unforeseen and detrimental impact on the person’s mental health or wellbeing, their social integration and access to services, or an impact on safety to themselves or the safety of others.”

Two transgender women sexually assaulted in male prisons

However, it directs: “Regardless of where prisoners are held, they should be respected in the gender in which they identify, being provided with those items that enable their gender expression.”

In a previous statement, the MoJ said: “It is apparent that the treatment of transgender people in courts, probation and prison services has not kept pace with the development of a more general understanding of the issues surrounding gender in society.

“Policy in this area needs to evolve and take as its starting presumption a wish to respect someone in the gender in which they identify, once in the care of the criminal justice system.

“Allowing transgender offenders to experience the system in the gender in which they identify will, in the great majority of cases, represent the most humane and safest way to act.

“We believe it will also assist successful rehabilitation. In the minority of cases where that is not possible, the reasons for departing from this starting presumption must be clear, explicit and made known to the person they affect, especially when it involves assigning someone to a male or female prison.”

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