The Prison Law Case of a Transgender Brutally Raped in Prison

https://digitalcommons.law.scu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1227&context=lawreview

Comment:  Above includes a brutal rape of a Transgender in an all male prison.  Below is a transgender accused of rape in a female prison.  These problems are ongoing.  Why are there so MANY transgenders?  Could the Pesticide Atrazine being used on produce be causing Transgenderism?  This should be researched!

Transgender inmate accused of rape

Transgender inmate accused of rape

Janiah Monroe

A transgender woman sent to Logan Correctional Center from a men’s prison has faced rape accusations and remains at the women’s prison in Lincoln after the governor’s office reportedly overruled a move by corrections officials to return her to a men’s facility.

More than one Logan inmate has reported being sexually assaulted by Janiah Monroe, known as Andre Patterson by the Illinois Department of Corrections, according to court documents. In a federal lawsuit aimed at forcing corrections officials to adequately treat gender dysphoria and improve care for transgender inmates, Dr. William Puga, head of psychiatry for the Department of Corrections, last year testified that Monroe wasn’t welcomed when she was moved to Logan last spring.

“Dr. Puga received information that Monroe threatened staff and other inmates,” U.S. District Court Judge Nancy Rosenstengel wrote in a December injunction ordering the Department of Corrections to provide hormones to transgender inmates and cease making housing assignments based on genitalia or physical appearance. “Women at the facility filed complaints against Monroe under the Prison Rape Elimination Act; some were false but many were legitimate.” Puga also testified that Monroe stopped taking hormones after arriving at Logan.

A sexual misconduct charge against Monroe has been upheld. Alan Mills, her attorney, says it was a case of consensual sex. Other sexual assault allegations, he says, weren’t proven.

“All I can tell you is none (of the accusations) have been found to be founded and all have been denied by her,” Mills says. He adds that Monroe, who has a history of mutilating her genitals and has attempted to castrate herself, denies that she’s stopped taking hormones. Monroe has requested surgery so that her body matches her gender identity.

On Feb. 10, a Logan inmate filed a Jane Doe lawsuit against several Logan prison employees, alleging that Monroe had raped her and that she was wrongly punished after reporting the assault to prison staff, who discounted it. Like the plaintiff, Monroe isn’t identified by name in the lawsuit, but multiple sources confirmed that she is the person accused of rape.

The lawsuit came three days after U.S. District Court Judge Michael Mihm issued an injunction barring the Department of Corrections from moving Monroe to a men’s prison without providing 14 days notice to the court and her lawyer and an explanation showing why a transfer is necessary.

The Department of Corrections tried to move Monroe out of Logan last June, about three months after she was moved to the women’s prison from Pontiac Correctional Center, where she says she was sexually assaulted, harassed and abused by inmates and staff. In a written statement to the court, Monroe says that she was put in a van that made it to the prison gate before turning around. In her statement, Monroe says she was told that the governor’s office stepped in to stop a transfer to Pontiac.

“(W)hat happened was, the governor’s office called someone at the Department of Corrections and said, ‘Don’t let this happen,’ and it didn’t,” Mills says. He said he didn’t know how the governor’s office learned that Monroe was being moved. The governor’s office didn’t immediately respond to an email from Illinois Times asking about the aborted transfer.

Rape allegations aside, Monroe’s time at Logan hasn’t been easy.

She’s been housed in segregation for her own safety, according to court records. In October, she attempted suicide with a razor. Her injuries were serious enough that she was treated outside prison grounds.

Louis Meyer, attorney for the inmate who says that she was punished for reporting that she’d been raped by Monroe, said that the alleged assault occurred last summer, about a month after prison officials began transfer proceedings that were cut short. “It’s going to come down to a jury sizing up the individuals and testing their credibility,” Meyer said.

Shortly after the alleged assault, Glen Austin, then Logan Correctional Center warden, testified in a deposition that Monroe had told officials that she had no sexual interest in women. Mills said it’s common for inmates, having no other opportunities, to have sex with other inmates even though they identify as heterosexual.

Austin described Monroe’s time at Logan as “turbulent.”

“Multiple tickets, serious infractions, previous PREA (Prison Rape Elimination Act) allegations, inappropriate sexual behavior and a confirmed investigation that substantiated sexual misconduct,” Austin said in his July deposition. “Her actions here at the facility, I think with her history, to me it is very concerning.”

Monroe, 30, has been locked up since 2005, when she was charged with shooting two people outside a barbershop. In 2006, she strangled her cellmate in the Cook County jail. Department of Corrections records show she’s serving time for 11 felonies, including second degree murder, attempted murder, aggravated battery, aggravated battery involving a government employee, three counts of aggravated battery involving a peace officer, two counts of aggravated attempted arson, damage to government property and bringing contraband into a penal institution.

The December injunction issued by Rosenstengel requires the Department of Corrections to develop policies to ensure that decisions about treating gender dysphoria are made by qualified medical professionals. The injunction also states that the department must allow inmates to obtain evaluations for gender dysphoria upon request and provide access to clothing and grooming products consistent with gender identities.

“The court recognizes that these changes will take time, but in light of the serious deficiencies in IDOC’s treatment of transgender inmates, (the court) seeks assurance that progress is underway,” Rosenstengel wrote. Concerned that the Department of Corrections wasn’t taking transgender issues seriously, the judge ordered top prison officials named in the lawsuit to read the transcript of a two-day hearing that resulted in the injunction.

Mills said he doesn’t think feelings about Monroe or other transgender people are uniform at Logan.

“I think you can’t talk about everybody at Logan as a group any more than you can on the outside,” Mills said. “Some people are extremely comfortable with transgender folks, some are not. The same is true with race. … We have rules against discrimination within society. Discrimination based on sexual orientation is one of them.”

Contact Bruce Rushton at brushton@illinoistimes.com.

Trans woman found guilty of rape moved to men’s prison

This article is more than 2 months old

Move follows Nicola Sturgeon telling MSPs Isla Bryson would not be detained at all-female Cornton Vale

Isla Bryson, a transgender woman found guilty of raping two women before transitioning, has been moved from Scotland’s all-female Cornton Vale prison to a male facility after an intervention by Nicola Sturgeon.

The first minister told MSPs earlier on Thursday that Bryson would not be incarcerated in the women’s prison “either short term or long term”, after a report saying the offender had been transferred there on Tuesday prior to sentencing prompted outrage across the political and campaigning spectrum.

Sturgeon emphasised it was important not to suggest “even inadvertently” that trans women posed an inherent threat to women.

Pressed repeatedly on the matter at first minister’s questions on Thursday by the Scottish Conservative leader, Douglas Ross, Sturgeon said she agreed it was not possible to have a rapist incarcerated in a female prison.

Emphasising this was an operational matter for the Scottish Prison Service, she added: “The Scottish Prison Service is in the process of giving effect to the decision it has taken not to incarcerate this prisoner in Cornton Vale.”

Ross described the decision as a “screeching U-turn” after the justice secretary, Keith Brown, told MSPs on Wednesday that he trusted the Prison Service to decide.

It later emerged that Sturgeon had made a rare intervention during a meeting involving Brown, which took place shortly before she announced at Holyrood that Bryson was being moved from Cornton Vale.

Sturgeon’s official spokesperson said the first minister had not ordered the Prison Service to move Bryson to a male prison but added: “I expect and I think the Prison Service might expect ministers’ views to be taken into account.”

He denied suggestions Sturgeon had taken part directly in that meeting and acknowledged ministers very rarely were involved in decisions about individual prisoners, but said the first minister believed no rapist should be held in a women’s prison.

On Tuesday there was widespread anger that Bryson – who first appeared in court in 2019 as Adam Graham and was known to both victims by that name – was being remanded in a female prison.

Why Scotland’s gender reform bill is sparking concern over trans prisoner policies
Read more

The Guardian understands the court service designates the prison to which an offender is initially sent. From there, the Prison Service decides where to locate the offender. Bryson was being kept in segregation while an initial multi-disciplinary case conference was carried out on Tuesday, to assess the risks and consider longer-term placement.

Opponents of the Scottish government’s gender recognition changes, which the UK government has blocked from going for royal assent because of “safety issues for women and children”, said the case vindicated their concerns about a lack of safeguards in the bill.

Asked directly by Ross if it was safe for female prisoners to be in the same facility as a double rapist, Sturgeon responded: “Firstly, in general, any prisoner who poses a risk of sexual offending is segregated from other prisoners, including during any period of risk assessment.

“Secondly, there is no automatic right for a trans woman convicted of a crime to serve their sentence in a female prison, even if they have a gender recognition certificate. Every case is subjected to rigorous individual risk assessment and as part of that the safety of other prisoners is paramount.

“Finally, in general terms and perhaps most importantly, I heard the chief executive of Rape Crisis Scotland say yesterday: ‘I don’t see how it’s possible to have a rapist within a female prison.’ And so let me be very clear, I agree with that statement.”

But Sturgeon also underlined it was important during such exchanges “that we do not even inadvertently suggest that somehow trans women pose an inherent threat to women”. She added: “Predatory men, as has always been the case, are the risk to women. However, as with any group in society, a small number of trans people will offend and where that relates to sexual offending, public concern is understandable.”

Bryson, from Clydebank, West Dunbartonshire, was found guilty of two charges of rape on Tuesday after a six-day trial at the high court in Glasgow.

The jury heard Bryson raped two women, one in Clydebank in 2016 and one in Drumchapel, Glasgow, in 2019, after meeting them online. Prosecutors described Bryson as “preying” on vulnerable women.

Cornton Vale is due to close within weeks, with inmates already being moved out, as part of a wider revamp of the women’s estate, including a purpose-built facility opening in Stirling, and two community custody units that opened last year in Dundee and Glasgow.

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