Wednesday, July 22, 2015

In the News: Des Moines Register

Jail inmate helps Iowa’s transgender learning curve

 
 
If all goes according to plan, Meagan Taylor should be out of Polk County Jail and heading home to Belleville, Ill. Thanks to the generosity of strangers, her Iowa bond has been posted and the five-year-old Illinois fines that triggered her arrest warrant from that state should be paid.

But as the circumstances leading to Taylor’s July 13 West Des Moines arrest prove, all can’t be trusted to go according to plan, especially when you’re black, transgender and on a trip to a new place with a trans friend. Your appearance might be deemed suspicious by the hotel manager, setting off a call that brings police to your room. An outstanding $500 fine, incurred when you were 17, might now have escalated to $1,713 and generated a warrant. Had you come from wealthy stock, that might have been paid off long ago, buffering you from the indiscretions of youth. Then you might not have given the wrong name when police showed up at your hotel room. Had you not been transgender, the hormone pills you take to make your physical being match your mental one probably wouldn’t have been in your purse.
Iowa already tops the nation in the rate at which it incarcerates black people. Add in trans and you’re likely out of luck.
We might hear these statistics, but when a Meagan Taylor, whose legal name is Derez Flowers, comes along, we get to see how it works in real life. “It’s still hard to be black and transgender,” said Taylor Tuesday in an interview in her cell in the medical unit of Polk County Jail. “You get racially profiled. They think we’re all doing stuff.”

For all her problems, Taylor comes across as a sweet 22-year-old who unsuspectingly landed in a bad spot, when all she really wants to be doing is nails and hair. She goes to cosmetology school and works in a salon. But she also got lucky: Her story inspired an outpouring of donations topping $4,000 in just a few days. The fund drive was taken up by Megan Rohrer, a Lutheran pastor in San Francisco with the Welcome Ministry, after a column on Taylor appeared in this space last week. Locally, activists have picketed the Drury Inn — which remains tight lipped — on Taylor’s behalf.

She also drew support from an unexpected place: the jail itself. “The jail had a lot to do with getting my story out there,” said Taylor. It was Polk County Sheriff Bill McCarthy who reached out to me about Taylor’s story because he wanted aspects of it to reach the LGBT population, and get their input on how some things should be handled. McCarthy says there’s “a disconnect” between law enforcement and some sectors of society. “Issues like this should not be resolved by the justice system alone,” he told me. “There has to be input from society in general.”
That seems an awfully enlightened position for a county sheriff to take. McCarthy said Caitlyn Jenner has helped serve as a catalyst. He thinks in Hollywood, this would be a “ non-issue,” though I suspect it would still be one, maybe just less of one. “It’s an issue here,” he said, “because we haven’t crossed those bridges yet.”

This is also significant because Taylor had complained earlier of feeling alone and isolated in the medical unit, and some activists around the country took that to mean she’d been placed in solitary confinement. Some critics slammed the jail, even going so far as to say it bordered on “torture,” said Donna Red Wing, who heads the LGBT organization One Iowa. She visited the jail Tuesday and was impressed with the care officials have taken with Taylor. They are bound by state law that requires men to be placed with men and women with women. But given the high incidence of assaults nationally on transgender inmates, jail officials wouldn’t put Taylor in a male unit. They also said she had requested protective custody, so they housed her in what the jail director calls the “penthouse” of the facility — with a television, hospital bed and telephone access.

Taylor now says she has been treated very well and that jail officials stretched to give her access to people who could help her.

There’s a learning curve all around; that’s inevitable. But maybe the lesson is that the best way to handle the discomfort of an unfamiliar situation is to try and get more educated and familiar with it, rather than jump to the worst conclusions — as Drury Inn seems to have done. For all that Taylor had to endure, this story has an uplifting twist in the way that some people who never met her — maybe never met a transgender person at all — reached out in outrage and empathy to support her. If only we all only followed our better instincts.

In the News:Mic

Why This San Francisco Pastor Is Raising Money for a Trans Woman of Color Jailed in Iowa

Most people don't expect to end up in jail while they're on vacation.

But that's exactly what happened to Meagan Taylor, a 22-year-old black transgender woman from St. Louis who visited Des Moines, Iowa, earlier this month. Taylor and a friend, an unnamed woman who is reportedly also transgender, were staying at the town's Drury Inn when hotel personnel called the police to report "two males dressed as females" who they suspect of possibly working as prostitutes.
Meagan Taylor before her arrest.
Source: San Francisco Welcome Ministry
Taylor studies cosmetology and was not engaged in sex work, but when cops arrived they found hormones she uses to aid her gender transition and arrested her for using prescription drugs without a prescription. Thanks to a host of other legal entanglements, including $500 in fines she owes Illinois authorities because of a previous conviction for credit card fraud at age 17, Taylor remains in jail. 
But she's not alone.

Pastor Megan Rohrer of San Francisco's The Welcome Ministry heard about Taylor's story from friends in Iowa. Rohrer, who is the first trans pastor ordained by the Lutheran Church and uses the pronoun "they," says Taylor's story is all too common. "I had just visited South Dakota and had all of the same fears [of being profiled], but nothing had happened to me," Rohrer told Mic on Wednesday. "What happened to Meagan could have happened to me."
Meagan Taylor speaks to Pastor Rohrer from jail.
Source: San Francisco Welcome Ministry
Walking while trans: Transgender women of color in particular are so often profiled by police as sex workers that the phenomenon has even earned a name: walking while trans, which was detailed by German Lopez at Vox.2014 report from Columbia University showed the extent to which law enforcement polices gender. "LGBT people, specifically transgender women of color and LGBT youth of color, are endemically profiled as being engaged in sex work, public lewdness or other sexual offenses," researchers wrote. "Police in many jurisdictions use possession of condoms as evidence, supporting arrests for prostitution-related offenses."

Last Friday, Rohrer began crowdsourcing funds to help Taylor raise money for bond and other legal expenses. So far, the response has been overwhelming and they've raised more than $5,000. 
"When transphobia and discrimination feels so big we don't know how to fix it, sometimes raising $4,000 feels more tangible," Rohrer said. "We can support the trans community by fixing something smaller."

Even though the money for her bond has been raised, Taylor will likely remain in jail until an Aug. 10 court date, unless that court date is moved up. 

In the news: Boston Edge

Trans Woman Says She Was Profiled, Wrongfully Arrested

Wednesday Jul 22, 2015
Approved screen shot from a video chat between Pastor Megan Rohrer and Meagan Taylor
Approved screen shot from a video chat between Pastor Megan Rohrer and Meagan Taylor  (Source:The Welcome Ministry)
A transgender woman of color, who was arrested by Iowa police July 13, says she was actually booked because of her gender identity, the Des Moines Register.

Megan Taylor, 22, was visiting Des Moines, Iowa with a friend, who is also a trans woman, from Illinois. The pair stayed in the Durry Inn. According to reports, hotel workers contacted police to report "two males dressed as females" and were concerned about "possible prostitution activity."

When cops showed up at the hotel room, they found Taylor, a hairstylist and a cosmetology student, in possession of hormones in an unmarked bottle and charged her with possession of prescription drugs without a prescription. Think Progress points out Taylor gave a fake name to police and argued that she was being treated unfairly. Police then charged her with "malicious prosecution," an aggravated misdemeanor.

Cops then conducted a background check on Taylor and found she had an outstanding probation violation from Illinois for a 2010 credit card fraud conviction. Taylor said she served her time for the crime when she was 17 but still owes $500 in fines.

"What happened to me was definitely based on my gender," Taylor said. "Transgender people are being gender and racially profiled and it has to stop."

Taylor's bond was set at $2,000 but she didn't know anyone locally to co-sign her release and she does not have a lawyer, Think Progress notes.

When Taylor was taken into custody, police debated where to place her - officials didn't want to place her with men, but were uncomfortable putting her with women. According to Polk County Sheriff's Office, Taylor requested "protective custody," which means she was held in the medical unit of Polk County Jail by herself. Think Progress reports when she was brought into custody, she was patted down by a female officer on the top half of her body, and by a male officer for her bottom half.

Since the incident, Pastor Megan Rohrer, a member of the Welcome Ministry in San Francisco, launched a crowdfunding campaign, which has raised more than $5,000 for Taylor's fines in Iowa and Illinois. The money is also going to be used to help her legally change her name and get a new ID with her preferred gender.

Think Progress reports a number of people have shown support for Taylor and about 20 people protested outside the Durry Inn last Saturday, asking for a public apology and for the hotel to reimburse Taylor for the room and cost of arrest. The Des Moines Register wrote protesters also wanted the hotel "to commit to training and development for hotel staff regarding positive interactions with LGBTQ communities and communities of color." Officials from Durry Inn have yet to comment on the incident.

While it was initially believed Taylor would remain in custody until August 10, the Des Moines Register reported Wednesday in a separate article that she was able to post her $2,000 bail, thanks to the donations from the crowdfunding campaign. The newspaper writes she signed an extradition waiver, which allows authorities to transport her back to Illinois.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

In the News: Des Moines Register

Travel is tricky for transgender population

 
 
As a transgender Lutheran pastor I was saddened by the article, “Arrested While Transgender: Sex of inmate tests jailers,” [July 17] not only because of the injustice of the arrest, but the unfortunate reporting of information about Meagan Taylor’s medical status and private parts.

Since the information is already out there, I hope that people will use it as an opportunity to learn about the discrimination that trans individuals face as we travel and the on-going diversity training that is needed for individuals working in hospitality, law enforcement and criminal justice.

Born and raised in Sioux Falls, S.D., a part of my heart will always be in the Midwest. A few weeks ago, when I was presiding at a wedding, I was afraid. Each hotel stay, each trip to the bathroom was a possible encounter with violence or discrimination. The article about Taylor reminds me that my fears are real.

From the safety of my home in San Francisco, I pray this story will move us ever closer to the just world that we all long for. May God bless Taylor, Des Moines and all who are trying to do their best in a time when the world is changing so fast.

— Pastor Megan Rohrer, Grace Lutheran, San Francisco, Calif.

In the News: Refinery29

Movement Grows To Free Woman Arrested For "Walking While Trans"

Reposted from: http://www.refinery29.com/2015/07/91087/meagan-taylor-transgender-arrested
On July 13, Meagan Taylor was arrested in Des Moines, IA. Her crime? She was charged with prostitution, but a growing numbers of supporters say she was actually just guilty of "walking while transgender" — and now they're are rallying to get her out.

On July 13, Taylor, 22, was visiting Des Moines when a staff member at the hotel where she was staying called the police, concerned that Taylor and her friend, also a trans woman, were involved in prostitution. When she was arrested, police found a hormone-therapy drug in her possession but say she didn’t have her prescription on her. Further digging by authorities revealed an unpaid fine from a long-ago violation relating to a credit card.

However, from the beginning, the catalyst for her arrest seemed to have been her appearance, not her actions; the police were told "two males dressed as females" were at the hotel, according to the local paper. Once in the Polk County Jail, Taylor was placed in a medical unit, in isolation.

"The arrest of Meagan Taylor is another example of how transgender women of color are targeted by the criminal legal system simply for existing," says ACLU staff attorney Chase Strangio. "Using prescription medication and staying the night at a hotel are things that so many of us take for granted, but for transgender women of color these daily life activities can lead to arrest."

Support for Taylor has also come in the form of tweets using the hashtag #FreeMeaganTaylor, which has been tweeted out more than 600 times.
 
Rev. Megan Rohrer, a Lutheran pastor based in San Francisco, who is also transgender and has roots in the Midwest, spearheaded a crowdfunding campaign that has raised the money to pay Taylor's $2,000 bail and other necessary expenses — and there's a chance she'll be released on bail in the coming days.

Although Rohrer is pleased with the progress, Taylor's story still illuminates how far trans rights still have to go. "Meagan mistakenly believed that things were getting better because of all the positive press for trans individuals and how far transgender rights have come recently," Rohrer writes. "But trans women of color experience discrimination and violence at unacceptable rates. I hope Meagan's story reminds my transgender siblings to be safe, educates the general public about transgender people, and shines a light on all the faithful people who are supporting LGBTQ individuals."

In the News: News One

Black Transgender Woman Was Profiled & Arrested During Vacation, Now She’s Stuck In Iowa

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A transgender woman from Lahokia, Illinois was arrested and held in a Polk County Jail for a crime she says she didn’t commit.

Meagan Taylor was vacationing with friends at the Drury Inn in Des Moines, Iowa last Monday when she was accused of soliciting sex in the lobby by an employee, reports Advocate. While being questioned by police, old warrants against Taylor were discovered, including credit card fraud and a probation violation from $500 in fines.

The 22-year-old stated the fraud charge was from her teenage years and was resolved.

She was also discovered with medication commonly used for transgender women to accompany estrogen — spironolactone hydrochlroide.

Despite her explanations, she was jailed and charged with malicious prosecution, possession of prescription drugs, and arrested without a warrant.

Police failed to provide a clear explanation why she was jailed. Taylor, who gave the police a fake name out of fear, believes she was arrested for being a transgender woman. During Taylor’s detainment, two different police officers patted her down; a female officer for the top half of her body, and a male officer for the bottom half.
“It seemed like they were trying to find something to charge me with,” she said. “I lied about my name [but] I was not doing any illegal activity. The lady called police because I was transgender and was with a transgender friend.”
Taylor’s bail of $2,000 was paid by donations gathered from Rev. Megan Rohrer, the first openly transgender Lutheran minster.

Because the jail doesn’t have a policy for transgender women who haven’t had gender-affirming surgeries, she was in a medical holding unit, where she was able to speak to Rohrer through a webcam.

“What happened to me, was definitely based on my gender,” Taylor told Rohrer from the single cell. “Transgender people are being gender and racially profiled, and it has to stop.”
The Polk County Sheriff’s Office released a statement assuring reporters that Taylor is safe, but didn’t reveal the reason behind her arrest.
“The Polk County Sheriff’s Office is working diligently to provide fair, equitable treatment for Ms. Taylor while providing a safe, secure environment during her pretrial detainment,” said authorities in the news release.
Sadly, this isn’t the first time a transgender woman of color has been accused of being a prostitute. A woman named Monica Jones was arrested for “manifesting prostitution” in 2013.
To help with Taylor’s pending case, check out Rohrer’s fundraising site here. 

In the News: Des Moines Register


Transgender inmate makes bail, awaits extradition


A 22-year-old inmate who says her gender identification landed her in the Polk County Jail has posted $2,000 bail raised by donations from strangers.

Meagan Taylor, whose legal name is Derez Flowers, signed an extradition waiver allowing authorities to transport her back to Illinois, where she could face additional fines of about $1,700. But an online fundraising effort in the wake of a Des Moines Register column Friday might also cover Flowers’ fines in Illinois.

The Rev. Megan Rohrer of The Welcome Ministry in San Francisco helped raise the money.

Taylor’s July 13 arrest has generated protests locally against the West Des Moines Drury Inn, where Taylor was arrested. Taylor told The Register she was visiting Des Moines with the friend, who is also transgender, and they were staying at the inn when she noticed the staff “acting really funny” around them. Then police showed up at their hotel room.

Police arrested Taylor after they said she gave a fake name and found prescription drugs in an unmarked bottle.

There also was a warrant from Illinois for an unpaid $500 fine related to a 2010 credit card fraud case, which had snowballed to $1,713.

A smiling Taylor, interviewed in her cell Tuesday after signing the extradition waiver, said she was happy with the outpouring of support.

“I was crying when she (Rohrer) said, ‘We’ve raised over $4,000 for you,’ ” she said.

She said she also was grateful to Polk County Jail officials and Sheriff Bill McCarthy, who “had a lot to do with getting my story out there.”

McCarthy had reached out to the Register about trying to do right by the transgender inmate on issues such as housing and frisking. Taylor has been housed in the jail’s medical unit in a private room with a hospital bed, a TV and telephone access.

Jail officials said Taylor had opted for protective custody, a voluntary request to keep a detainee separate from the general population. But in an earlier interview, Taylor, who is training to be a beautician, had said she didn’t like being isolated from other inmates.

Tuesday morning, she said the officers had been very supportive of her, allowing her to see guests she didn’t know who wanted to help. Assaults against transgender inmates are high in jails, and Iowa law requires male inmates to be housed with other men and women with women.

Nonetheless, some activist organizations have faulted the jail, saying Taylor was being kept in isolation. McCarthy and other county officials met Monday with Donna Red Wing, who heads the LGBT rights organization One Iowa, to clear up such concerns.

“I felt they were being as respectful as I could imagine,” said Red Wing after the meeting. “They were really intentional about that.”

She said the West Des Moines police may have had no choice but to arrest Taylor once they learned of the Illinois warrant. But the Drury Inn “made a bigoted move by calling police,” she said.

The inn has not returned several calls for comment.

West Des Moines Police charged Taylor with possession of prescription drugs without a prescription and malicious prosecution.

The police officer’s narrative said Taylor had “identified herself with a Missouri ID as Sylvester Anderson,” but Taylor said she didn’t present any ID, just said a fake name because she was scared. That still generated the malicious prosecution charge, according to West Des Moines Police spokesman Sgt. Brent Kock.

Taylor said the unmarked bottle of pills were part of her hormone treatments, and she has a prescription.
“If she does have a prescription, that can be taken care of through the court system,” Kock said.
Taylor is due back in Polk County Court Aug. 26 on the Iowa charges.

Under the law, Illinois authorities have 10 days to pick her up or Iowa can release her, said Sgt. Brandon Bracelin, sheriff’s office spokesman. However, with her Illinois fines being paid Tuesday, Taylor hoped that could be avoided.

The donated money had been wired to Taylor’s aunt in Illinois, who Taylor said was paying the fine.