Trans women transferred to men’s prisons despite rulings against Trump’s order | US news

Sexual transfers Prisoned women in the American prison system were transferred to men’s facilities under Donald Trump‘s Executive orderDespite the multiple court rulings ban The President’s policy, according to civil rights lawyers and accounts behind bars.
Trump is one day “The ideology of sex”One of the comprehensive attacks on transit rights said that the public prosecutor “guarantees that males do not detention in women’s prisons or include in women’s detention centers” and that there are no federal funds that go to treatment or confirmed procedures for detained persons.
The executive order was quickly challenged in court. In three lawsuits submitted on behalf of women who are in women’s prisons, their federal judges Ruling The American Prison Office (BOP) Their medical treatment cannot be withheld And it was prevented from transferring them to men’s facilities. One of the judges said that the prosecutors “showed directly that the irreparable damage would be followed.”
Lawyers fighting Trump’s directive say that the court’s rulings prevented the transfer of 17 transient women between the plaintiffs, but others are not in litigation now faces places in men’s facilities.
“I am still punishing his existence,” said Whitney, a 31 -year -old woman who was transferred from a women’s facility to a men’s prison this week. BOP changed its records from “female” to “male”, as the records appear. In letters before being transferred, she said that she felt as if “in the political games of others.” The guardian does not use its full name due to concerns about revenge.
Kara Yansen, a lawyer who represents the transit in litigation, said that she learned about another woman who is not listed in the recently transferred lawsuits to a facility that includes men, and the gender mark has changed in her records. Yansen also learned of a transient woman to enter a new BOP system, who was suffering from sexual confirmation before being imprisoned, but was placed in a men’s facility.
Prisons are required under the Act of Rape in Prison (Prea), which is a long -term federal law, to examine people imprisoned for the risks of sexual assault and consideration LGBTQ+ The situation when making housing decisions. Legal experts say that Trump’s heroic policy of housing in women crossing the men’s facilities is clearly violated PEA.
“This is unnecessary and incredible,” said Yansen. “Our customers are desperate and afraid.”
BOP did not respond to the suspension requests.
Lawyers said that crossing people have faced high levels of sexual violence and discrimination behind bars, and Trump’s command was carried out chaos, panic and major violations of their rights to exceed the threats of housing transfers.
BOP internal notes that The Guardian saw that officials are now asking employees to refer to the population converted by their legal names and their incorrect consciences, in addition to rejecting appropriate gender requests. The BOP team also canceled the policies that allowed the transit women to conduct their searches by the guards.
Susan Betty, a prominent lawyer in California Cooperative with immigrant justice, which represents nearly 20 people via federal prisons, said they received reports that some converts had been forced to threaten the discipline to hand over their underwear, including bras and boxers, as if they were clowns. They also said that they also heard accounts of male guards looking for transformed women in the confrontations of many women described as “siphon”. Betty said that some employees were encouraged to harass and waste people.
“It is already difficult to be a transient person in imprisonment in this country, and now the measures of this administration are intentionally and shocked by the people who are imprisoned further,” said Betty.
“It mainly punished sexual assault in some cases,” added Yansen, male women crossing women. Some crossing people told her that they suffer from suicide ideas and daily nightmares.
Whitney, who was recently transferred, said in the interviews before moving that the employees have given her for weeks. In mid -February, she and another heterogeneous woman were placed in a form of isolation called “a special housing unit” and they were told that it may have been there for months. She said that the other woman tried to commit suicide for fear of transferring her.
A few days later, women were transferred to the general population. However, a doctor told her that hormonal therapy medications would begin to be pointed. Whitney said that the exit of these medications would cause chaos on her body and mind, describing her “like slow death.” The doctor also said that the employees would start using male consciences, although she said this had not yet happened. She said she was also told that she would be allowed to keep the woman’s underwear already, but new clothes will not be released.
She said last week, she told the medical staff that her medicine would not change after all, but after that, she was asked to be packaged because she was transferred to a man’s facility.
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Lawyers said that litigation continues and immediately focuses on maintaining housing and medical care for individuals. But Yansen said that the lawyers will also fight for the long -time shelter women in male facilities and were in the pipeline to be transferred, and the call against the decline in basic residency through the regime. “It is a harsh and unusual punishment because you punish this group for another reason, but you do not think it should be present.”
One of the judges criticized the United States government for its failure to address the prosecutors’ fears that their defects in their gender will exacerbate in men’s prisons, “whether they will be searched by male reformist officers, or who were shower in the company of men, are indicated as men, forced men as men, or simply because the existence of men will lead to a disagreement.
Alex McLeerin, who was Acting Director of the National Institute for corrections (NIC) in 2022 before her retirement in 2024, said that Trump’s order expresses people and employees. NIC is part of BOP and is training and developing policies for corrective officials. McLearen led the formulation and implementation of the “transgender perpetrator” when he supervised the women and residents of BOP. This guide was recently canceled.
McLeerin said: “If you extract this away, no one knows what to do.” “If you are going to change the policy, then you are [should] Do it slowly and thinking. “
McLeerin said that confusion in imprisonment increases the levels of tension and the possibility of conflict between employees and prison.
Julie Aar, the National Director of the National Call for International Consultation, a human rights group that focuses on sexual assault in prisons and prisons, said Trump also increases the risk of sexual and physical assault on prison.
Abit, who spent 15 years in the Civil Rights Department at the US Department of Justice and helped formulate the National Prea standards, said that setting a goal on the prisoners in prison increases the risk of attack, which in turn puts the employees in the dangerous situation of interfering in violent situations.
McLeerin said that Trump’s policy has no benefit. It is claimed to “defend women” in prisons, but McLeerin said he was addressing a problem that does not exist.
McLeerin said: “This is fake – this is the whole executive is wrong on his face,” McLeerin said. “It is a scapegoat. It is easy for people crossing a scapegoat.”