Halifax study highlights experiences of LGBTQ people in criminal justice system - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Halifax study highlights experiences of LGBTQ people in criminal justice system

LGBTQ people in Halifaxwho have gonethrough the criminal justice system saythey've experienceddiscrimination, disparagement and ridicule during the legal process,a new research study has found.

Survey participants describe being discriminated against, belittled and disrespected

Multiple hands are seen holding bars at a prison.
Head researcher Ashley Avery hopes to bring attention and awareness to the experiences of LGBTQ people in the criminal justice system. (Shutterstock)

LGBTQ people in Halifaxwho have gonethrough the criminal justice system saythey've experienceddiscrimination, disparagement and ridicule during the legal process,a new research study has found.

The project was launched by Coverdale Courtwork Society, anon-profit organization in Halifax thathelps supportwomen and gender-diverse people who are involved, or at risk of becoming involved, in thecriminal justice system.

"I startedto notice justanecdotally thata lot of the folks that were going through the courtsand who were incarcerated in prisons and jails identified as2SLGBTQ," saidAshley Avery, the society's executive director.

"I quickly realized that yes, it's an issue that others notice, but it's incredibly under investigated. Certainly in Nova Scotia, but more broadly in the Canadian context."

30 participants from LGBTQ community

The project, called2SLGBTQ Plus Justice,was funded by the CommunityFoundation of Nova Scotia. It began inlate 2019 and wrapped upjust near the start of the pandemic lockdown last March.

Avery says she wants to ensure the voices of LGBTQ people who've gone through the criminal justice system are heard. (CBC)

The project consisted of 30 participants fromthe Halifax Regional Municipality who identified as being part of the LGBTQ spectrum and had somedegree of involvement withthe criminal justice system, including experiences withpolice, criminal courts, jail or prisons.

It reliedprimarilyon anecdotal evidence through interviews, focus groups and social events focused on community building, said Avery.

"Multiple experiences of incarceration were shared and interactions with police were identified as being particularly troubling, so reports of blatant disrespect and discrimination, misgendering and just using belittling and offensive language," saidAvery.

"Access to gender-affirming garments was an issue. This is was especially true for trans males."

Examining the root causes

The study also looked at what leads LGBTQ individuals to the criminal justice system in thefirst place.

"Homelessness, unemployment and previous experience in the care system were widespread across the board," said Avery.

Sara Tessier, a former inmate who nowworks with Coverdale Courtwork Society, was among the 30 participants.

She is also thenamed plaintiff ina lawsuit against the federal attorney general, alleging justice officials have failed to protect women in federal prisons from sexual assaultat the hands of prison staff.

Sara Tessier is the named plaintiff in a lawsuit launched by a Halifax law firm against the federal attorney general. The suit alleges justice officials have failed to protect women in federal prisons from sexual assault at the hands of prison staff. (CBC)

Tessier told CBC Radio's Mainstreet that she was singled outand segregated from the other inmates during her incarceration.

"I was targeted because as a lesbian, that must mean that I want to be with every single female that's in there, and that's how I'd be treated ... almost like a predator," she said.

"Other things I've experienced and witnessed as wellis that people that are trans are being called by their dead name, or even guards standing around laughing and making fun of using theirproper pronouns."

Poor access to mental health care

In addition to an overall lack of respect and empathy from inmates, court officials and staff, Avery said the project also found that access to mental health care and gender-affirming resources were limited, ifavailable at all.

She noted thatstrip searches and being placed in a jail that doesn't match an inmate's gender identitywere particularly traumatic for many respondents.

The project also includedpre-existing research, including an LGBTQ prison survey conducted in the U.S. by Black and Pink, a prison abolitionist organization that supports LGBTQ and HIV-positive inmates.

That report, calledComing Out of Concrete Closets, had1,118 prisoners across the United States write responses to a133-question survey.

The surveyfound 70 per centof respondents experienced emotional pain from hiding their sexuality during incarceration or throughout their interactions with the legalsystem. It also found that respondents were oversixtimes more likely to be sexually assaulted than the general prison population.

'Get this issue on the radar'

Avery, who has worked withCoverdale Courtwork Society since 2015, said she hopes the project's findings will help educate the broader public about the misconceptionsand stigma surroundingpeople who end up being incarcerated or otherwise involvedin the criminal justice system.

"Our objectives with the project were not only to generate some knowledge around this issue, but also to develop some community capacity and get this issue on the radar of other organizations," she said.

Avery will be revealing her findings in full during an online seminar next month through a collaboration for Sexual Assault Awareness Month with the Avalon Sexual Assault Centre in Halifax.

Avery saidalthough this first study was small and primarily anecdotal, she hopes to take the research furtherand plans to turn it into a master's thesis. She said more interviews and focus groups will be held.

Thefuture study will besupervised by activist and writer El Jones as well as Rachel Zellars, a transformative justice advocate, community organizer andassistant professor in the department of social justice and community studies at Saint Mary's University in Halifax.

"Really what I'm hoping is just to be able to continue to produce knowledge around this and hopefully influence some type of change," said Avery.