New Report Exposes 'Widespread Failure' of US Police to Protect and Serve Transgender People

A new report published Tuesday exposes the “widespread failure” of police forces across the United States to adequately protect and serve transgender people, and offers model policies and best practices to rectify this “systemic neglect.” 

“The solutions we offer can lead these communities and our nation’s law enforcement to a more equitable future, but we must get there together.”
—Mara Keisling, NCTE

The National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE) worked with dozens of local and state groups to analyze how the nation’s 25 largest police departments treat transgender people to produce the report, entitled Failing to Protect and Serve: Police Department Policies Towards Transgender People (pdf).

“As we make groundbreaking advancements towards transgender equality, many members of our communities continue to be affected by disproportionate contact with, and often by bias and abuse within, policing and the criminal justice system,” the introduction reads.

The report points out that a recent survey found 58 percent of transgender people in the United States who encountered law enforcement in the past year said they experienced harassment, abuse, or other mistreatment.

NCTE’s report issues grades for the scrutinized departments—from Atlanta to Boston to Chicago to San Francisco—based on 17 criteria, including bathroom access, department forms, medical care, respectful communication, search procedures, sexual misconduct, and training.

Over a two-year period, NCTE researchers evaluated publicly available policies and practices by “searching department websites, contacting each department, and consulting with local advocates and organizations invested in police reform.”

The report features individual department summaries as well as a color-coded chart that shows whether each department generally meets (green), partially meets (yellow), or either fails to address or contradicts (red) the researchers’ model policies in each category. Gray indicates the department lacks holding facilities, meaning those categories aren’t applicable.

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT