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Judge Demands ‘Dignity’ For Accused R*pist, Demands Alleged Victims Use Preferred Pronouns


The so-called transgender rights movement has long lost any semblance that its only goal is acceptance. With biological males invading women’s sports and an array of other gender-segregated spaces, even many one-time allies say the activism has become too radical.

One recent case in California provides the latest example of such extremism, this time in the form of a judge’s order.

As the Daily Wire reported:

A California judge has ordered that inmate Tremaine Carroll must be referred to by “she/her” pronouns because he has declared himself to be a woman and “deserves dignity.”

Carroll is on trial for allegedly impregnating one female inmate and raping two others after he claimed to be a woman — which, according to California law, requires him to be housed in a women’s prison despite having no psychological or medical evaluations to back up his claim — and a Madera County judge has now ordered everyone, including his alleged victims, to accommodate his pronoun choice.

Madera District Attorney Sally Moreno charged Carroll with rape, which he allegedly committed while he was incarcerated at Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla — where he was placed based solely on his self-identification as a woman.

The ruling sparked widespread outrage among social media users:

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The case has been fueling controversy for months:

Fox News provided additional coverage of the latest development:

Amie Ichikawa, founder and executive director of Women II Women and a former inmate who has closely followed Carroll’s case, previously told Fox News Digital there is no history of Carroll identifying as any kind of LGBTQ+ person until SB 132 passed.

“This is somebody that I did keep a close eye on because of their history, their background, their habitual manipulation, frivolous lawsuit after frivolous lawsuit, constantly filing complaints against everyone. I knew this was going to be an issue,” Ichikawa said.

“The committee that’s reviewing these requests to transfer can’t use someone’s criminal history, physical attributes, sexual orientation, anything like that,” she continued. “Anything that you would think would be a factor that should be taken into consideration before transferring someone to a women’s prison is not allowed and deemed discriminatory.”

In several complaints reported by Reduxx, Carroll uses he/him pronouns to refer to himself and did not mention gender identity or sexuality until 2021, three months after the Democrat-controlled California legislature passed SB 132.

Court records show that Carroll’s criminal history began with a charge of grand theft of property and possession of a firearm by a minor at 15 years old in 1988.

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Here’s what the county’s district attorney had to say:



 

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