Dallas Morning News - January 31, 2022
Transgender prisoner in Texas denied gender-affirming surgery, lawyer says
The U.S. Bureau of Prisons has denied a request from Cristina Iglesias, a transgender woman incarcerated in Texas, to become the first inmate in federal custody to receive gender-affirming surgery, her lawyers said.
Iglesias, 47, is serving a 20-year sentence for threatening to use a weapon of mass destruction against the British government. Last week, her lawyer said his client will not receive the surgery she has long requested before her scheduled release later this year.
“After years of fighting unnecessary hurdles and delays, Cristina has once again been denied the opportunity to get the care she needs and that the Constitution requires,” John Knight, director of the LGBTQ & HIV Project at the ACLU of Illinois, said in a statement.
The denial comes as the Biden administration takes steps to provide more accommodations for transgender inmates. Earlier this month, the federal prisons bureau released updated policies which reversed Trump-era guidance that required housing decisions to be made primarily based on “biological sex.”
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The guidance also includes a new section on gender-affirming surgery, a topic that was not directly addressed in the previous policy. Inmates can request surgery after one year of mental health, medical and programming services, the guidance says.
But Knight said the prisons bureau’s approach to Iglesias’ case shows it is willing to “run out the clock” on transgender inmates seeking care.
“Such an approach is neither fair nor humane,” he said.
Iglesias is currently housed at the Federal Medical Center Carswell, a women’s prison in Fort Worth. Her case was filed in federal court in Illinois because she was previously housed in a facility there.
Iglesias has been asking that the prisons bureau approve her for gender-affirming surgery since 2016. In December, a federal judge ordered the agency to make a decision.
If the bureau decided to approve her for surgery, the judge asked that it notify the court by Jan. 26. If it decided to deny her request, the judge gave the bureau 10 additional days to provide the court with an explanation.
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