Tuesday 3 January 2012

Chicago News Cooperative: For Transgender Detainees, a Jail Policy Offers Some Security

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Maribel, 40, concedes she has long lived on the margins of society, never holding down a job and bouncing in and out of jail over the years.

In March, she was charged with retail theft and sent to Cook County Jail. Despite her shoulder-length hair, fuller lips and breasts, Maribel (who agreed to be interviewed on the condition that only her first name be used) was housed with male detainees.

“It was horrible,” she said. “Sometimes words hurt more than a punch. People can be very cruel.” After two weeks she was moved to the women’s division, where she remains while awaiting trial.

Also in March, Cook County Jail instituted a new policy for detainees like Maribel, who either identify themselves as transgender or are identified by the jail’s medical staff as having gender-identity disorder, the formal diagnosis for those who feel at odds with their sex at birth.

Under the policy, which covers procedures for housing, clothing, showering, grooming, medical care and other aspects of life in jail, a gender identity committee meets periodically to determine and review plans for each transgender detainee. Among the decisions the committee makes is whether the detainee should be housed with men or women.

Of the 60 or so transgender detainees who have entered the jail since the new policy took effect, only two — Maribel and another person who was born with male anatomy but identifies as a woman — have been housed with women, jail officials said. All of the others, who were born male but identify as women, are housed with men but have opted for protective custody and are kept separately from the other detainees, a choice available to anyone entering the jail.

Sheriff Thomas J. Dart said he instituted the new procedures when he realized that the jail — which holds an average daily population of about 8,900, primarily consisting of people awaiting trial — did not have a policy on how to deal with transgender detainees.

In one of his weekly meetings of jail officials, “when it came up, I asked around the room what everyone’s thoughts were on it, and there was a collective pause,” Mr. Dart said. “It just became clear to me that we needed to have a more affirmative position.”

Jails around the country are starting to address the difficult and sensitive issue of how to deal with transgender detainees. Lawsuits over their mistreatment have focused more attention on the issue. Another factor has been increased knowledge about the vulnerability of transgender detainees and inmates, in part due to the federal Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003.

Randi Ettner, an Evanston psychologist who is chairwoman of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s Committee for Incarcerated Persons, said policies dealing specifically with transgender inmates are critical for protecting their safety and health.

“I’ve been in many other prison settings where patients who need and require medical interventions are ignored,” said Dr. Ettner, who helped the Cook County Jail staff craft their policy. “They’re inappropriately treated when they do receive treatment and, sadly, this has led to a lot of self-harm in prison systems,” including attempts to castrate themselves to rid their bodies of testosterone.

About 1 in 11,000 men and 1 in 30,000 women are born with gender-identity disorder, Dr. Ettner said. Treatment typically consists of psychological, hormonal and sometimes surgical approaches.

The issue is a significant concern for corrections officials because transgender people are more likely to end up in jail than the general population. A 2011 report based on a survey of 6,450 people described as transgender or gender nonconforming, sponsored by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the National Center for Transgender Equality, said: “They are more likely to interact with police because they are more likely to be victims of violent crime, because they are more likely to be on the street due to homelessness and/or being unwelcome at home, because their circumstances often force them to work in the underground economy, and even because many face harassment and arrest simply because they are out in public while being transgender.”

Seven percent of respondents reported being arrested or detained in jail due only to their gender identity.

Sexual assaults are 13 times more prevalent among transgender inmates than the general prison population, according to a 2007 University of California, Irvine, study of California state prisons.


View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment