Scottish who changed gender found guilty of raping two women
Isla Bryson, 31, previously known as Adam Graham, was convicted at the High Court in Glasgow. PHOTO/COURTESY: CNN
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A transgender woman who raped
two women before beginning to transition will not be sent to Scotland's only
all-female prison, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Thursday.
Isla Bryson, 31, previously known as Adam Graham,
was convicted at the High Court in Glasgow on Tuesday of raping one woman in
2016 and another in 2019.
Bryson, who claimed during the trial to have decided to transition gender aged 29, was reportedly due to be held at Cornton Vale women's prison ahead of sentencing next month, stirring widespread public anger.
The case comes with
transgender issues in the spotlight in Scotland after Sturgeon's devolved
government passed legislation last month to make it easier for people to
self-identify their gender.
The UK government has subsequently blocked the law
from obtaining royal assent, citing the potential negative impact on UK-wide
equalities legislation, and setting up a legal showdown between the two
governments.
"Given the understandable public and parliamentary
concern in this case I can confirm to parliament that this prisoner will not be
incarcerated at Cornton Vale," Sturgeon told Scotland's devolved
parliament.
"I hope that provides assurance to the
public."
During court proceedings, Bryson claimed to have
wanted to change gender since the age of four and to be currently taking
hormones and seeking surgery to complete gender reassignment.
But Bryson's estranged wife, Shonna Graham, 31, has
questioned her former partner's motives for the decision in newspaper
interviews.
"Never once did he say anything to me about
feeling he was in the wrong body or anything," she told the Daily Mail of
Bryson, adding it was a "sham for attention".
The UK's shadow interior minister, Labour MP Yvette
Cooper, told BBC Radio on Thursday that "this dangerous rapist should not
be in a women's prison".
She added: "That is straightforward and I think
most people would agree with that."
However, Fiona Cruickshanks, head of operations and
protection at the Scottish Prison Service (SPS), earlier said that "any
transgender person who is admitted into custody is admitted into the
establishment that matches their identified gender.
"If an individual inmate poses a particular risk, they can be removed and separated from other prisoners," she added.


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