The U.S. Supreme Court has officially declined to take up the case of a transgender inmate in Idaho who sued state officials to get sex reassignment surgery.
Adree Edmo unofficially won her case in May. Thats when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that it would not block a lower courts ruling requiring Idaho to pay for her surgery, which is also known as gender confirmation surgery.
She got that surgery in July and was transferred to a womens prison in Pocatello later that month, becoming the first transgender inmate in the country to do so through a court order.
As of mid-October, state officials have spent $456,738 of taxpayer money to fight that battle in court, which they lost each step of the way.
In a statement, Gov. Brad Little said, "The taxpayers of Idaho should not have to pay for a procedure that is not medically necessary. From the start, this appeal was about defending taxpayers and I will continue to do so."
But the surgery itself likely wont cost taxpayers any extra cash because its covered under the prisons contract with its health care provider, Corizon Health.
At issue was whether the Idaho Department of Correction violated Edmos constitutional rights protecting her against cruel and unusual punishment and whether the surgery was medically necessary.
She was diagnosed with gender dysphoria soon after she was originally sentenced to prison in 2012 for sexual abuse of a child under 16. Gender dysphoria is a condition that can cause significant distress when a persons physical body doesnt match their gender identity.
Edmo was eventually allowed to undergo hormone therapy, but she was kept in a mens prison and was denied sex reassignment surgery. Her legal team argued that denial aggravated her gender dysphoria to the point where she twice attempted to castrate herself.
Edmo is scheduled to be released from prison in July 2021.
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