Living nightmare for transgender inmate at all-male prison

On hormone therapy since 2008, Bilyk’s features are increasingly feminine, and that has resulted in more attention from male inmates. She has been in prison since 1987 serving a life sentence for second-degree murder after a house robbery she took part in led to the death of the female homeowner.
On hormone therapy since 2008, Bilyk’s features are increasingly feminine, and that has resulted in more attention from male inmates. She has been in prison since 1987 serving a life sentence for second-degree murder after a house robbery she took part in led to the death of the female homeowner.

Nastasia Laura Bilyk calls it a living nightmare.

A transgender inmate, who identifies as a woman, is doing time in the all-male Mountain Institution, a federal prison located on the outskirts of Metro Vancouver.

Now, she has filed a complaint with the Canadian Human Rights Commission in hopes of changing things for herself and for all transgender inmates. She wants to force federal prison officials to recognize the gender she identifies with and treat her accordingly.

In Bilyk’s affidavit, filed with her complaint, she describes her life.

She says she is kept in solitary confinement for her own protection. While at the federal Ferndale Institution in B.C. she was repeatedly raped, the affidavit says. Bilyk did not identify any assailants to prison authorities but she was moved to a treatment centre, and then to Mountain Institution where she received counselling, the affidavit says.

And even in isolation, Bilyk is not safe. In the affidavit she recounts a three-week stretch when she only showered twice because the ward lacked privacy and forced her to bathe with men nearby.

On hormone therapy since 2008, Bilyk’s features are increasingly feminine, and that has resulted in more attention from male inmates. She has been in prison since 1987 serving a life sentence for second-degree murder after a house robbery she took part in led to the death of the female homeowner.

Worse than the harassment, fear, and threats of physical violence, the affidavit continues, is the pain Bilyk feels when someone fails to acknowledge her as a woman.

“Now, staff usually use female pronouns, but sometimes I am still referred to as a man,” it reads. “It makes me want to cry and scream.”

Those conditions amount to “discrimination”, claims the complaint filed with the commission on December 4. That document argues the country’s federal prison system, Correctional Service Canada (CSC), “fails to accommodate transgender prisoners”.

The complaint was filed by Jen Metcalfe, executive director of Prisoners’ Legal Services (PLS). “The only remedy that we will be looking for is policy reform,” she said.

The policy in question is correctional services directive 800-5, which states that transgender inmates in a pre-op phase of treatment will be held in a facility based on an individual’s physical attributes.

In an email response, a correctional services spokesperson would not comment on Bilyk’s complaint.

“The Correctional Service of Canada cannot accommodate your request for an interview. As this complaint is currently being processed it would be inappropriate for CSC to comment at this time,” Avely Serin wrote.

A growing number of provinces are changing their policies for inmates diagnosed with gender dysphoria, the condition where someone’s emotional and psychological identity is the opposite to their biological sex.

In January, Ontario’s provincial prison system became the first in Canada to make it official policy to place pre-op transgender inmates in facilities based on their gender identities.

On Nov. 15, B.C. became the second.

Now, representatives for the governments of Alberta and the Yukon Territories say their correctional systems are revising policies for transgender inmates to follow Ontario’s lead.

The Canadian Human Rights Commission will now consider whether Bilyk’s complaint should be sent to the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal.

If the complaint is deemed valid, it will be forwarded to the tribunal for a hearing and a final determination. Correctional services officials will be able to challenge the complaint.

If the rights commission decides in Bilyk’s favour, it would put pressure on federal prisons across the country to change.

In B.C., Bianca Sawyer was the first person transferred from a male to female facility under B.C.’s revised policy. In an interview at Alouette Correctional Centre, a provincial prison for women, she explained the relief she felt upon arriving there.

“It was a calming euphoria,” she said. Sawyer contrasted that feeling to years spent in prisons where she was constantly surrounded by male prisoners.

Sawyer is in jail for six counts breach of probation, possession of stolen property under $5,000, and uttering a forged document. She was previously convicted for committing 10 bank robberies.

She recounted strip searches conducted by male guards, the fear she felt showering in a room full of men who knew she identified as a woman, and constant verbal abuse from both inmates and prison staff.

Sawyer, who with Metcalfe’s help played an instrumental role in B.C. Corrections revising its policies, went on to recount worse stories about two transgender inmates she knew during four years she spent at Mountain Institution.

“They were made to give lap dances and sexual acts for people’s birthdays,” Sawyer began. She recalled inmates standing in line waiting for oral sex. Sawyer noted there was usually something traded in exchange, such as a food item. But she emphasized that doesn’t mean the act was consensual.

“There was nothing that they could really do,” Sawyer explained. “I mean, they could go cry to the guards, but where are they really going to go?”

Sawyer said a transfer to a federal facility remains her greatest fear. “I don’t want to be treated like they were,” she added.

It’s unknown how many transgender inmates there are in federal facilities and provincial prisons across the country.

In response to requests for numbers sent to each prison authority in Canada, most jurisdictions sent emails saying they did not keep track (B.C., Manitoba, and Quebec) or that they held no transgender inmates.

In Ontario, 63 inmates identified themselves as transgender during intakes between April 2014 and March 2015. On Nov. 14, there were 12 transgender inmates in the province’s custody. Alberta reported it held 16 transgender prisoners as of Nov. 27. Saskatchewan said it presently has one.

Corrections Canada said it could not provide a number. Metcalfe says she has worked with eight transgender inmates in federal custody.

This article originally appeared in print in the Toronto Star and online at TheStar.com on December 14, 2015.

B.C. Corrections transfers first transgender inmate from men’s to women’s facility

As an inmate who identifies as transgender, Bianca Sawyer has plenty of criticism for how B.C. Corrections treated her in the past. But she says reforms that allowed her to be transferred to a facility of her gender identity have exceeded her expectations.
As an inmate who identifies as transgender, Bianca Sawyer has plenty of criticism for how B.C. Corrections treated her in the past. But she says reforms that allowed her to be transferred to a facility of her gender identity have exceeded her expectations.

Bianca Sawyer was overjoyed when she entered the Alouette Correctional Centre, a provincial prison for women located in Maple Ridge.

“For three days my face hurt from smiling,” she wrote in a letter to the Straight.

Born Jaris Lovado, Sawyer is the first transgender individual that B.C. Corrections has allowed to be transferred to a facility of the gender she identifies as, rather than one selected on the basis of physical attributes.

“I am the first pre-op male-to-female transgender to be transferred from a male B.C. provincial jail to a female once,” she writes. “B.C. Corrections is calling it ground breaking.”

According to section 9.17 of the B.C. Ministry of Justice Adult Custody Policy, an inmate is not permitted such a transfer until they have progressed in treatment to step four of six outlined in that document. Step four is described as “surgical removal of sex organs”.

Sawyer’s transfer marks a departure from that policy.

In a telephone interview, B.C. Justice Minister Suzanne Anton described the move as part of formal changes in rules and procedures.

“The written policy is still under development, but you can see the application of the policy is already underway,” she said. “We have had our first person placed based on gender-identity, and it seems to have worked out very well.”

Anton stressed she could not speak about any specific individual on account of privacy legislation, but did confirm Alouette Correctional Centre as the facility that received the transfer.

She said staff are now working out the details and revising exactly how the policy will appear on paper.

In addition to allowing inmates to reside in facilities that match their gender identities, Anton said B.C. Corrections will also improve transgender individuals’ access to medical treatment, and provide enhanced training to staff for how they should accommodate transgender inmates.

“Corrections staff will be trained to deal with individual situations as they come along,” she said.

The changes at B.C. Corrections follow the Ontario government implementing similar reforms in January 2015. Anton said a review of those developments was conducted as part of the process her ministry has undertaken.

According to Sawyer’s letter, the transfer occurred on September 30.

“When I was called for transfer I was ecstatic to say the least,” she wrote. “A calming euphoria of appreciation and thanks washed over me.”

To understand why Sawyer was so happy upon arriving at Alouette Correctional Centre, one has to understand from where she came.

She was transferred from Kamloops Regional Correctional Centre, a prison for men.

“Imagine being female in a male population,” she wrote. “Imagine this…name calling, sexual harassment and bullying would be a constant threat? What about the very real possibility of sexual abuse? No doubt that a population of sexually deprived men wanted to do things to me, a truly scary situation.”

She goes on to recount having to urinate in front of male inmates, being strip-searched by male guards, and regularly receiving verbal abuse that focused on her gender from both inmates and staff.

“I stayed awake all night crying,” Sawyer writes about one day when she was repeatedly frisked by a male guard.

Sawyer lobbied for the transfer with the assistance of West Coast Prison Justice Society (WCPJ), a group based in Burnaby that provides legal aid to prisoners across Canada.

In a telephone interview, WCPJ lawyer Jen Metcalfe said the risks faced by this group of prisoners has always been extreme.

“The problem with holding transgender women in men’s prisons is that they are at a huge risk for violence, sexual assault, and harassment,” she explained. “Most of our transgender clients say that they are verbally harassed by other prisoners, sometimes guards….Our federal transgender clients, I have had a few reports that they’ve been raped or physically assaulted.”

Metcalfe told the Straight it’s impossible to say how many people reside in B.C. Corrections facilities who might be eligible for facility transfers like the one Sawyer was granted. She acknowledged it is very likely a small number. But Metcalfe stressed the significance of each case given the circumstances of extreme vulnerability transgender prisoners face when housed among inmates of a gender different from their own.

“It’s just cruel,” she said. “I think it’s time for policy reform.”

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This article was originally published online at Straight.com on November 4, 2015.

Class-action lawsuit seeks to end Canadian prisons’ use of solitary confinement against mentally ill inmates

A notice of claim filed July 17 in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice alleges that the country's prisons are becoming the largest repositories for citizens who struggle with a mental-health challenge. Travis Lupick photo.
A notice of claim filed July 17 in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice alleges that the country’s prisons are becoming the largest repositories for citizens who struggle with a mental-health challenge. Travis Lupick photo.

How a Kelowna man was treated during several years he spent inside a federal prison in British Columbia could have a significant impact on the way Correctional Service Canada (CSC) treats prisoners diagnosed with a mental illness.