A recent report by the O'Keefe Media Group (OMG) revealed that biologically male inmates who identify as female and transfer to women's prisons purposefully impregnate female inmates.
The inmates' ulterior motive is to bring suit against the U.S. government for creating "million dollar babies," with taxpayers footing the bill. A psychologist with Merrick Garland's Justice Department confirmed that the DOJ "rolls over" and pays people off instead of going through the courts. The rights of female prisoners are being "trampled upon," according to the psychologist.
Last month, an undercover journalist with OMG spoke to a source inside the Washington Corrections Center For Women (WCCW) who revealed that she knew of trans inmates and female accomplices perpetrating this scheme to scam the system.
The whistleblower said the slang term for this practice is "million dollar baby." James O'Keefe, the founder of OMG, explained that this means a woman gets pregnant by a man claiming to be transgender, and they sue to try to get a million dollars.
The psychologist confirmed that the men involved in this scheme are in it for the money. "What they all want to be after is money, they all want money," she said. When asked how the scam works, the psychologist explained that both parties play the victim card. Unfortunately, the DOJ under Merrick Garland rolls over and pays people off instead of going through the courts. Taxpayers are left to foot the bill.
The psychologist also noted that the rights of female prisoners are being "trampled upon." "We didn't have any of this even a decade ago. It just started over the past decade with all the sex change operations," she said.
Following OMG's report last month, The Post Millennial learned that a volunteer for the Department of Corrections was suspended from visiting the prison for recording an inmate who said she feared sharing a cell with a male who identifies as female. The Washington State Department of Corrections said that DOC policy prohibits visitors from recording visits, so anyone who violates that is suspended.
A new whistleblower from the department came forward following the last month's undercover report and told OMG that a male inmate named Brooke Sonia (formerly Brett Sonia) was placed "just a few doors down" from one of his victims.
Sonia is one of five biological inmates incarcerated at WCCW convicted of rape, among other crimes. The whistleblower said Sonia was placed in the same unit on the same tier, just a few doors from his victim.
Sonia was formerly incarcerated in New Hampshire on three counts of state sex offenses, incest of his biological daughter, child pornography, and other crimes. He was transferred from New Hampshire to WCCW a year after filing a lawsuit in federal court claiming that his 8th Amendment rights were being violated.
Sonia claimed he was placed in isolation in a cell with predatory male inmates when he complained about inmate threats and sexual assaults, but the whistleblower disputed the claim.
"He actually was recently moved to another pod because of sexual activity. He got to live out what he was there to do. He wanted to have sex with women, and he got his wish," the whistleblower said. The source added that Sonia had no intention of going through with any "transition" procedures.
O'Keefe noted that the women inside this prison are saying that they are being retaliated against for making the same claims that the man pretending to be a woman claimed.
In a statement following the OMG report, the Washington State Department of Corrections claimed that the report was a "common myth perpetuated about people who are transgender is that they will commit crimes of assault against vulnerable populations." The department emphasized the importance of inclusion and representation by recognizing the unique challenges that non-binary and transgender incarcerated people face.
DOC takes allegations of crimes seriously. Any person incarcerated at DOC suspected of committing a crime is subject to the same laws and investigations regardless of where they are housed or their gender. The department believes that a person's right to safe and humane treatment does not change based on gender identity.
DOC continues to actively work with community outreach organizations to identify and address possible systemic issues regarding housing, mental health, and medical services for people who identify as transgender, and the agency remains committed to the health and safety of all people in its custody.
DOC policy prohibits visitors from recording visits, so anyone who violates that is suspended. The policy, DOC 490.700 Transgender, Intersex, and/or Gender Non-binary Housing and Supervision, establishes procedures to ensure equitable treatment of transgender, intersex, and/or gender non-binary people during intake screening and determining housing, classification, programming, and supervision.
All people under DOC's care and custody are assessed upon intake. If they self-identify as transgender, intersex, or gender non-binary, the policy provides detailed guidance on placement and programming.
DOC has developed a comprehensive housing assignment process to determine where an incarcerated individual is housed, considering objective criteria, including gender identity. If a person identifies as transgender or non-binary, they participate in a thorough mental health assessment, healthcare assessment, and facility evaluation.
Several multidisciplinary teams must review all requests for transfer for a final placement determination. Each situation is considered on a case-by-case basis, focusing on safety for the individual and those housed at the facility.
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