California prisons grapple with hundreds of transgender inmates requesting new housing

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Kelly Blackwell longs to escape her life as a transgender woman in a California men’s prison, where she struggles every day to avoid being seen in her bra and panties and says she once faced discipline after fighting back when an inmate in her cell asked for oral sex.

After more than 30 years, and two decades since Blackwell began hormone therapy, her chance to leave arrived last fall when groundbreaking legislation gave transgender, intersex and nonbinary inmates the right, regardless of anatomy, to choose whether to be housed in a male or female prison.

The demand has been high, with 261 requests for transfers since SB 132 took effect Jan. 1, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. It’s the start of a hugely sensitive operation playing out in one of the largest prison systems in the country.

“I won’t be around predatory men and I won’t be around staff that frown upon trans women,” Blackwell, 53, said in a phone call from Mule Creek State Prison, east of Sacramento.

But more than two hours away, at the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla, there’s fear. Inmates say guards have warned them that “men are coming” and to expect sexual violence.

“That if we think it’s bad now, be prepared for the worst. That it’s going to be off the hook, it’s going to be jumping,” Tomiekia Johnson, 41, said staffers have told her. “They say we’re going to need a facility that’s going to be like a maternity ward. They say we’re going to have an inmate program where inmates become nannies.”

Just over 1% of California’s prison population — or 1,129 inmates — have identified as nonbinary, intersex or transgender, according to the corrections department, populations that experience excessive violence in prison. A 2007 UC Irvine study that included interviews with 39 transgender inmates found that the rate of sexual assault is 13 times higher for transgender people, with 59% reporting experiencing such encounters.

So far, the prison system has transferred four inmates to the Chowchilla women’s prison, approved 21 gender-based housing requests and denied none. Of the 261 requests, all but six asked to be housed at a women’s facility.

Prisons spokeswoman Terry Thornton said in a statement that COVID-19 precautions have slowed the transfers and that officials could not estimate how long a transfer might take under normal circumstances, citing bed availability as a factor.

The Times spoke to more than a dozen inmates in women’s and men’s prisons to understand how the new law is playing out. Although advocates and inmates say the transfers have been received well, several claim that misinformation spread by prison staffers is stirring up transphobia and that more must be done to educate inmates.

Some prisoners are also concerned that inmates are making false claims about their gender identity in order to transfer to women’s prisons and say staffers have told them that this has slowed the process.

Thornton told The Times that the prison system had facilitated a town hall discussion with the Inmate Advisory Council at Chowchilla and with trans women at San Quentin State Prison. The meeting and ongoing discussions “have helped to dispel any fears,” she said, adding that allegations of staff misconduct are taken seriously and investigated.

When asked whether inmates in the men’s prisons trying to manipulate the transfer system has been a significant issue, Thornton said that “a person’s gender identity is self-reported and CDCR will evaluate any request submitted by an incarcerated person for gender-based housing.” She said that the prison system has requested several million dollars from the state to help implement the law.

In recent years, Connecticut and Massachusetts have passed similar legislation as the California law, which also gives inmates the right to be searched and addressed based on their gender identity. The laws help put states in line with the federal Prison Rape Elimination Act, or PREA, which prohibits housing decisions based solely on an inmate’s genitalia and requires agencies to consider on a case-by-case basis whether a placement would ensure an inmate’s health and safety. Despite PREA, advocates say that it’s rare for transgender inmates to be relocated.

The new California law follows other changes in the state’s treatment of transgender prisoners. In 2018, a law took effect removing obstacles for prisoners to change their gender and name. And in 2015, California became the first state to create policy for transgender inmates to apply for state-funded gender-affirming surgery. According to the prisons agency, from January 2015 through February 2021, 65 out of 205 requests for surgery were approved and nine were completed.

Under prison policy, transgender and intersex people — the latter being a term used to describe conditions in which a person is born with reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn’t seem to fit the typical definitions of “female” or “male” — are placed, to the extent possible, in certain prisons to ensure they can receive certain medical and mental health treatment. With the new law, all inmates will be asked upon admission about their gender identity, their pronouns, whether they prefer the female or male search policy, and if they want to be housed in an institution that aligns with their gender identity, according to the corrections department.

Inmates can request transfers to their correctional counselor, which are then considered by a committee that includes the warden, custody, medical and mental health staffers, and a PREA compliance manager. Staffers review the inmate’s criminal record, health needs, custody level, sentence and safety concerns.

Michelle Calvin said inmates welcomed her with care packages when she transferred in February from Mule Creek to the Chowchilla prison. But there was also tension. Inmates in two rooms refused to have her as a roommate.

“There’s a lot of women here that accept me; there’s some that do not,” said Calvin, 50. “There’s going to be adversity everywhere and I understand that.”

Tyeasha Moore, housed a few doors down from Calvin, quickly warmed up to the newcomer. Calvin was “more than willing” to answer her many questions, including why she chose to come to the prison, and if other inmates would follow.

But Moore, 43, said that she has also heard staffers question inmates housed with Calvin, asking whether she has exposed herself, explained her sexual behavior to them or said things that made them uncomfortable. She said the questioning has fomented anxiety and false rumors that Calvin is in a relationship.

The prison system said that it has provided training to staffers statewide on working with transgender, intersex and nonbinary inmates, including information on safe housing, search procedures and pronoun usage. But advocates say it hasn’t been effective enough.

Mychal Concepcion, a transgender man in the Chowchilla women’s prison, said widespread panic about the transfers stems largely from staffers who ask inmates, “What are you going to do when the men get here?”

“The complaints from the cis [gender] women here are that these are men coming here and they’ve been traumatized by men and so they shouldn’t have to live with them,” said Concepcion, 51. “I have repeatedly said that they’re women, but their anger gets directed towards me.”

Johnson, the inmate who said staffers had told her to expect violence with the transfers, said that she has survived domestic violence from a man and that it would be triggering to live with transgender people who haven’t had gender-affirming surgery.

“I do think they should be safe, but it infringes on my right to be safe as well,” she said.

Tiffany Tooks, a transgender woman in the Chowchilla prison, has also been trying to address concerns. She transferred from Mule Creek in 2019 after having gender-affirming surgery.

“For me, it was everything,” she said, explaining how the inmates received her well after she opened up about her experiences from more than 20 years in prison — which included being raped and hearing inmates make sexually degrading comments when seeing her in the shower. “I feel it’s my duty to help the women that are coming here so they are not misunderstood.”

Tooks said that in early March, she participated in a meeting with the warden, prison staffers and other transgender inmates to address inmates in the men’s prison trying to transfer under false pretenses.

“The idea was how do we determine who really are transgender inmates coming into the prison system here and the fear of the women here who were afraid and still they are afraid that male inmates will infiltrate this prison system and cause problems,” she said.

Several transgender inmates at men’s prisons hold that the issue is prevalent.

A transgender woman at a men’s prison, who asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation, said that she knows at least five inmates who have applied to transfer under false pretenses and that staffers have asked her to help identify such inmates.

“They wanted me in a confidential setting to tell them who is transgender and who is not, so they can block some of these guys from going to the women’s prison,” she said. “I told him I don’t have a problem with it…. We feel they’re climbing our backs.”

Jasmine Jones, a legal assistant at the Transgender Gender-Variant & Intersex Justice Project, which provides supportive services to inmates, has been in touch with several dozen inmates in the women’s facilities with concerns about the transfers, explaining to them that she was raped several times in prison and attempted suicide four times.

She said that her story has resonated with many but that she’s still concerned about inmates posturing as nonbinary or transgender. Jones said the law should have first focused on those who have transitioned or are in the process of transitioning before allowing for others to transfer.

But Jen Orthwein, an attorney who represents transgender inmates and worked on the bill, said that not all inmates want or have access to hormone therapy or gender-affirming surgery, and that “any expression of femininity in a men’s prison places people in danger.”

At Mule Creek, Blackwell said that when she was approved to transfer she felt relief but also worry about entering a new environment.

She said it hurts to know that some are anxious about her coming over and asserted that transgender women have no plans to be predatory.

“They don’t want to do things like that because that’s been our life,” she said. “All we’re really hoping for is connection and compassion.”


 
Just designate one prison as the one for trannies and other sex offenders.

Cut prison violence in half over night.
 
Kelly Blackwell longs to escape her life as a transgender woman in a California men’s prison, where she struggles every day to avoid being seen in her bra and panties and says she once faced discipline after fighting back when an inmate in her cell asked for oral sex.
This sounds very gender affirming. She should be euphoric. And "faced discipline" doesn't mean "was disciplined," so what's the big deal?
 
Their troon names make them really hard to dox.

Which I suppose is the point.

Edit: Here's some faggot petitioning Jerry Brown to let the transman go. Interesting that the transman is in the women's prison.

 


I feel sorry for the women in these prisons. It's a pity that terves don't follow the Arthashastra maxim
 


I feel sorry for the women in these prisons. It's a pity that terves don't follow the Arthashastra maxim

I'm not familiar with this and Google is not helping. Do you have a summary?
 
I don't see any possible negative side effects of to this. Nope, none at all.
 
Do the crime, do the time.

It would be interesting to see what the trannies are in prison for in the first place. I kind of subscribe to what Milt said above. Have one prison dedicated to nothing but trannies/sexual offenders. Some states already have similar programs. For example, sex offenders are not thrown in gen pop in Wisconsin; they have a separate prison for sex offenders.

But we are talking about 1% of the prison population when it comes to trannies as stated in the article and is further questioned as to how many are actually faking it to get preferential treatment. Do their "special needs" outweigh the expense of creating a coddle momma facility just for them? IMHO, no. Deal with it. It's prison, not a fucking country club.
 
Do their "special needs" outweigh the expense of creating a coddle momma facility just for them? IMHO, no. Deal with it. It's prison, not a fucking country club.

I'd rather have a coddle momma facility where troons can rape their own kind then a coddle momma facility where they have women to rape.
 
I can understand why Zoomers are increasingly trooning out due to peer pressure, social media, victimhood complex, wokeism, and being groomed right and left online – by why in the fuck are middle aged men who have been behind bars for decades suddenly becoming trannies? How the hell does a guy who's pushing 50 or 60 and has been isolated from society get the desire to become reborn as a cute little girl uwu? I'm seriously confused beyond all logic.
 
I got you @KiwiFuzz. Posted this in Tranny news but applies here:

Kelly Blackwell longs to escape her life as a transgender woman in a California men’s prison

Kelly Renard Blackwell is serving a life sentence for kidnapping, attempted robbery, and the attempted murder of 16 year old Krishna Hubbard in 1988.
598148B3-E0C0-4CEB-9048-F93497DA284F.jpeg

Michelle Calvin said inmates welcomed her with care packages when she transferred in February from Mule Creek to the Chowchilla prison.
6BF74DAC-C7C5-4A97-AE9E-151D3D218224.jpeg
Manuel Louis Calvin is serving a life sentence for robbery and multiple carjackings.

Tiffany Tooks, a transgender woman in the Chowchilla prison
Norman Tooks Jr., is serving a life sentence for first degree murder in the robbery and beating death of Edward Broderick in 1994.
598148B3-E0C0-4CEB-9048-F93497DA284F.jpeg

Mychal Concepcion, a transgender man in the Chowchilla women’s prison, said widespread panic about the transfers stems largely from staffers who ask inmates, “What are you going to do when the men get here?”
“The complaints from the cis [gender] women here are that these are men coming here and they’ve been traumatized by men and so they shouldn’t have to live with them,” said Concepcion, 51. “I have repeatedly said that they’re women, but their anger gets directed towards me.”

FTM Michelle Lyn Concepcion was convicted of first degree murder in the shooting death of Steven Ramirez in 1998.

As recently as 2020, Michelle was still representing herself as female in her applications for appeal.

A 2007 UC Irvine study that included interviews with 39 transgender inmates found that the rate of sexual assault is 13 times higher for transgender people, with 59% reporting experiencing such encounters.


The UC Irvine report is from 2009 not 2007, and is joint study between UC Irvine and the California Dept of Corrections. It was a trans advocacy project highlighting the vulnerabilities of the trans population in California prisons. Here’s a PowerPoint of it.

Even though it’s advocating for protecting male trans from sexual assault, such a report would never see the light of day in current year as the survey reveals some disturbing information about the trans prison population versus general prison population.

49.8% of trans inmates are in prison for crimes against other persons; general pop is 54%, so these numbers are fairly close. Troon rights advocates like to spew that troons are incarcerated because they’re sex workers, but in California prostitution and solicitation are misdemeanor offenses. So it stands to reason that these men are in there for actual felonies, not just being hookers.

61.1% of trans inmates are in the two highest custody levels (Class III 29%; Class IV 32.1%) versus gen pop 46.9%. There is no explanation as to why trans inmates are placed in higher custody level units.

Life sentences are 13.3% troons versus 14.5% general pop. Again, very close numbers.

Now the biggies: Mental health designation, meaning the inmate has been diagnosed with a mental illness, 64.1% trans versus 20.2% gen pop.

And finally registered sex offender 20.5% trans versus 14.6% gen pop. It should be noted in California that convictions of prostitution and solicitation are not subject to being placed on the sex offender registry, so again this isn’t “wont somebody please think of the poor sex workers!” These are men convicted of actual sexual assaults, rapes, CP, etc.
 
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@OttoWest Thank you! If we still had the death penalty, several of these troons wouldn't be a problem. First degree murder, first degree murder... you don't say? Oh, I'm sure I misunderstood and these were just crimes of passion. /sneed
 
I got you @KiwiFuzz. Posted this in Tranny news but applies here:



Kelly Renard Blackwell is serving a life sentence for kidnapping, attempted robbery, and the attempted murder of 16 year old Krishna Hubbard in 1988.
View attachment 2064163


View attachment 2064161
Manuel Louis Calvin is serving a life sentence for robbery and multiple carjackings.


Norman Tooks Jr., is serving a life sentence for first degree murder in the robbery and beating death of Edward Broderick in 1994.
View attachment 2064163



FTM Michelle Lyn Concepcion was convicted of first degree murder in the shooting death of Steven Ramirez in 1998.

As recently as 2020, Michelle was still representing herself as female in her applications for appeal.




The UC Irvine report is from 2009 not 2007, and is joint study between UC Irvine and the California Dept of Corrections. It was a trans advocacy project highlighting the vulnerabilities of the trans population in California prisons. Here’s a PowerPoint of it.

Even though it’s advocating for protecting male trans from sexual assault, such a report would never see the light of day in current year as the survey reveals some disturbing information about the trans prison population versus general prison population.

49.8% of trans inmates are in prison for crimes against other persons; general pop is 54%, so these numbers are fairly close. Troon rights advocates like to spew that troons are incarcerated because they’re sex workers, but in California prostitution and solicitation are misdemeanor offenses. So it stands to reason that these men are in there for actual felonies, not just being hookers.

61.1% of trans inmates are in the two highest custody levels (Class III 29%; Class IV 32.1%) versus gen pop 46.9%. There is no explanation as to why trans inmates are placed in higher custody level units.

Life sentences are 13.3% troons versus 14.5% general pop. Again, very close numbers.

Now the biggies: Mental health designation, meaning the inmate has been diagnosed with a mental illness, 64.1% trans versus 20.2% gen pop.

And finally registered sex offender 20.5% trans versus 14.6% gen pop. It should be noted in California that convictions of prostitution and solicitation are not subject to being placed on the sex offender registry, so again this isn’t “wont somebody please think of the poor sex workers!” These are men convicted of actual sexual assaults, rapes, CP, etc.
Not really surprised that these are lifers. Which means that the shitshow will continue until they have an "accident," unfortunately. But a murder charge doesn't necessarily guarantee the death penalty, in other states.
 
As if this isn't just a shitload of prisoners finding out that you can get transferred out to a women's institution as long as you have absolutely no shame whatsoever and a steeled willingness to commit to the act.
 
As if this isn't just a shitload of prisoners finding out that you can get transferred out to a women's institution as long as you have absolutely no shame whatsoever and a steeled willingness to commit to the act.

I'm shocked--shocked I say--that a bunch of felons have absolutely no shame whatsoever and a steeled willingness to commit to the act.
 
“They wanted me in a confidential setting to tell them who is transgender and who is not, so they can block some of these guys from going to the women’s prison,” she said. “I told him I don’t have a problem with it….
"I need to be transferred into the presence of women, because being around men makes me feel UwU scawed and vulnewable. But I also don't have a problem with being around the exact same men I was supposedly terrified of, once I've gotten easy access to women I can rape."

Woah, what a surprise.
How the hell does a guy who's pushing 50 or 60 and has been isolated from society get the desire to become reborn as a cute little girl uwu? I'm seriously confused beyond all logic.
By realizing that by growing his hair out a bit, he gets to have access to pussy, when he hasn't had any in 25 years, and wouldn't have any for the rest of his life.
I'd rather have a coddle momma facility where troons can rape their own kind then a coddle momma facility where they have women to rape.
That's why you just leave them in the male genpop.
 
@OttoWest Thank you! If we still had the death penalty, several of these troons wouldn't be a problem. First degree murder, first degree murder... you don't say? Oh, I'm sure I misunderstood and these were just crimes of passion. /sneed
One of the cases the Cali troon prison advocates like to trot out is Carmen Guerrero, an MTF who was beaten to death by his cell mate Miguel Crespo in 2013.

It’s a case that has been used as justification for men being placed in female facilities. Rather than addressing the wholly preventable errors that led to Guerrero being placed with Crespo, a guy who outright threatened Guerrero just a few hours prior to them sharing a cell (not to mention Kern Valley State Prison’s shit record that year of four inmate deaths) it’s now played up as poor poor Carmen, if only he could’ve been housed with the other ladies none of this would’ve happened.

In 1995 Carmen Guerrero repeatedly stabbed his common law wife Mary Perkins in front of their young daughter, ultimately killing Mary. It was their daughter who had to call 911 to report that her father has just murdered her mom. Her uncle later testified in court about the impact on the girl and that she would wake up at night crying for her mother.

Not a single mainstream source even mentioned why Guerrero was in prison.

There are ways to safely house trans inmates. California did it for years by having special units for gay and trans male prisoners. There’s no reason to change any of that.
 
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