DOJ launches probe into California and Maine women's prisons

The US Department of Justice has opened an investigation into women's prisons in California and Maine over policies allowing transgender-identifying men to be housed with female inmates. Officials cite accusations of rape and sexual advances against women prisoners. The probe examines potential violations of female inmates' constitutional rights.

The Justice Department announced on Thursday an investigation into multiple facilities, including the Central California Women’s Facility in Madera County and the Maine Correctional Center in Windham. A third site, the California Institution for Women in San Bernardino County, also faces scrutiny. The focus is on state policies that permit men identifying as transgender to enter women's prisons, amid claims of assaults on female inmates. Attorney General Pam Bondi stated, “Keeping men out of women’s prisons is not only common sense – it’s a matter of safety and constitutional rights. The Trump Administration will not stand by if governors are facilitating the abuse of biological women under the guise of inclusion.” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon added, “Under my leadership, the Civil Rights Division will not allow women incarcerated in jails or prisons to be subject to unconstitutional risks of harm from male inmates.” Specific cases include Tremaine Carroll, a 53-year-old inmate at the Central California Women’s Facility, charged with rape after one cellmate became pregnant and two others accused him. District Attorney Sally Moreno noted in December 2024, “After his first cellmate became pregnant and was moved to Los Angeles, two other cellmates of his had complained that he had raped them, so we have filed rape charges against this inmate.” Court proceedings use female pronouns for Carroll. In Maine, Andrew Balcer, a 27-year-old serving 40 years for murdering his parents and listed as female at 6 feet 1 inch and 310 pounds, faces accusations of forcibly kissing women and offering to impregnate them, according to state records and the Sun Journal. California's Transgender Respect, Agency, and Dignity Act, enacted in September 2020 and sponsored by Senator Scott Wiener under Governor Gavin Newsom, has led to at least 45 such transfers. Last year, state Democrats rejected a measure to bar male sex offenders. First Assistant US Attorney Bill Essayli criticized the law, saying it has provided “none of these qualities to the female inmates... who have been forced to share space with biological men who are violent felons.” Maine Governor Janet Mills called the probe “politically motivated, predetermined investigation designed to target states that stand up to the Trump Administration.”

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Illustration depicting BOP's new gender dysphoria policy document alongside a federal injunction blocking its enforcement, symbolizing legal tensions over transgender inmate care.
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Bureau of Prisons adopts new gender dysphoria policy; federal injunction continues to block enforcement

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The U.S. Bureau of Prisons (BOP) issued a new program statement on February 19, 2026, titled “Management of Inmates with Gender Dysphoria,” setting out mental-health “evaluation and treatment” guidelines that describe gender dysphoria as a DSM-5-TR mental health diagnosis and define gender identity as “disconnected from biological reality and sex.” Advocates say the policy would end or restrict gender-affirming hormones and require the removal of gender-affirming personal items, but a federal court order in Kingdom v. Trump has required the BOP to continue providing hormone therapy and certain accommodations while the case proceeds.

The U.S. Justice Department released a report on Tuesday alleging that the Biden administration selectively enforced the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act against anti-abortion activists. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stated the department will not tolerate a two-tiered justice system. The findings have drawn criticism from advocacy groups.

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Almost two months after unveiling a proposed rule on March 5 to let the attorney general review ethics complaints against DOJ attorneys before state bar action, the Justice Department faces intensifying debate. With Pam Bondi out as attorney general and Todd Blanche acting in the role, officials cite rising politically motivated filings—citing cases involving Bondi, Ed Martin and Drew Ensign—while critics decry it as undermining state oversight and the McDade-Murtha Amendment.

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