Liberty Counsel
NEWS RELEASE
Contact: PUBLIC RELATIONS
DEPARTMENT - 800-671-1776
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
August 3, 2007
Judge
Forces Idaho To Fund Estrogen Treatment
for Man Who Thinks He Is A Woman
Boise,
ID - Federal district Judge Mikel Williams ruled on Friday that
the Idaho Department of Correction must provide an inmate with estrogen
therapy. The judge will consider continuing treatment when the issue
goes to trial. The inmate believes that he is a woman trapped in a
man's body. The man, who castrated himself using a disposable razor
blade while in prison, demanded female hormone therapy. He also changed
his name from Randall Gammett to Jenniffer Spencer. The man is serving
a 10-year sentence for escape and possession of a stolen car.
After
prison officials refused estrogen therapy, but instead offered testosterone
therapy to replace the hormones lost to castration, the inmate sued,
alleging he was subjected to cruel and unusual punishment and other
constitutional violations.
State
officials said the inmate was in prison for several years before demanding
treatment. In 2004, he survived an attempted suicide. Two months later
he tried to castrate himself, failing in the first attempt but later
succeeding. He was diagnosed with an unspecified sexual disorder and
bipolar disorder.
Liberty
Counsel is a nationwide legal organization with experience in litigation
of transsexual legal issues. In June 2004, Liberty Counsel won a case
on behalf of a Florida woman against the National Center for Lesbian
Rights, which represented a woman who, after watching an MTV program
and so-called "sex reassignment surgery," changed her name from Margo
to Michael, began testosterone treatment, and then had a total mastectomy
and hysterectomy. This person then wanted to be considered "male"
for purposes of Florida's marriage laws. Although a trial court judge
wrote an 809-page opinion claiming that gender is primarily a "state
of mind," Liberty Counsel got the ruling overturned on appeal. The
appeals court ruled that "the common meaning of male and female .
. . [refers] to immutable traits determined at birth."
Mathew
D. Staver, Founder of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty University
School of Law, commented: "Hormones and plastic surgery do not
change a person's sex, which is an immutable trait fixed at
birth. Plastic surgery and hormone treatment to alter a person's
sexual appearance is no more warranted than is liposuction for an
anorexic. The state should not be compelled to fund so-called sex
reassignment surgery, especially when such treatment is not widely
accepted, is experimental, and has not been shown to resolve the disturbed
mental behavior."
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