Trans women may now be held in women’s facilities, immigration officials say
U.S. immigration officials on Monday announced transgender detainees will for the first time be able to be housed in detention facilities that match their gender identity.
The update is part of an 18-page guide unveiled today that details how U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers and contractors should interact with transgender immigrants in custody.
“We believe this guidance is the most comprehensive for transgender individuals in any custodial entity,” Andrew Lorenzen-Strait, the deputy assistant director for custody programs for ICE, told Fusion in a telephone interview Monday.
The announcement comes less than a week after an undocumented transgender woman named Jennicet Gutiérrez interrupted President Obama’s speech at a White House pride event.
“President Obama, release all LGBTQ immigrants from detention,” Gutiérrez told the president.
Also last week 35 members of the House of Representatives sent a letter to Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson urging him to end the detention of LGBT undocumented immigrants.”
ICE officials said today’s announcement was not a result of public pressure from advocates and that the new memo is a continuation of policies to keep transgender inmates safe that were released as early as 2009. The guidance is the result of a 6-month working group that included input from former and current transgender detainees, according to ICE.
The guidance will also be accompanied with training that will help officers better understand how to respectfully ask an inmate about their gender identity and their unique needs during intake processing.
“It would be an improvement, certainly, to not be housed with men anymore, but it’s still not ideal. It’s still detention,” — Trans woman held in a men’s detention center in 2014
The catch? One of the most common critiques of immigration authorities is that they don’t follow their own policies. Another common complaint from advocates is that policy changes take years to go into effect because of the agency’s patchwork of contract facilities. Before Monday’s announcement, ICE released a set of progressive policies in their 2011 detention standards meant to protect transgender detainees.