Home News National & International News S. Idaho transgender woman fights use of male name
S. Idaho transgender woman fights use of male name
Submitted by Michael Brown   
Monday, 15 December 2008 04:14

[News/People] [ID,USA] S. Idaho transgender woman fights use of male name

Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:25 am (PST)

The Olympian - Olympia,WA,USA
S. Idaho transgender woman fights use of male name
By JESSIE L. BONNER | Associated Press Writer
Published December 13, 2008

PAYETTE, Idaho - For nearly a year, Catherine Carlson refused to pay
the fine for driving with a suspended license because it was issued to
both her and the man she used to be.

She went to jail four times over the ticket that includes both her
legal name and the one she was born with, Daniel Carlson. She had
surgery 28 years ago to become a woman, the gender she believes should
have been assigned her at birth.

Carlson legally changed her name in the 1970s, but police and court
records include both in this rural farming and ranching community east
of the Snake River in southwestern Idaho.

"The ticket was the last straw," Carlson said.

Her fight against local authorities brought up questions Payette
County had never answered before: where to house a transgender person
in a jail with separate cells for men and women, which courthouse
bathroom should she use, should the former male name be stricken from
county records.

"This is a very conservative old-fashioned community, that's just the
way it is. This is rural, small town Idaho. This is new to us," said
Payette County Sheriff Chad Huff.

During the past year, Carlson repeatedly protested the $841 citation
in court hearings on the case.

Her struggle for acceptance since the sex-change operation on
Thanksgiving Day 1980 has gone on much longer. She chose a life of
solitude at a trailer park near the Payette city limits, rejecting a
society she feels has rejected her.

In her cramped mobile home, she thumbs through court records from a
2000 dispute over a house between her and her mom. The male name was
entered into the system then, she said, after she sought a protection
order in the case.

While a stranger in California recently settled the dispute over the
ticket - paying the fine that was reduced to $510 in October after
Carlson spent three days in jail - she vows to continue her fight
against the local justice system for using a name she feels is a
threat to her safety because it reveals she is transgender.

"It destroys my ability to be me," Carlson said. "It's not just a ticket."

Elizabeth Barbour, 57, a bookkeeper in Redwood City, Calif., found out
about Carlson after a story in Carlson's local newspaper, the Argus
Observer, was posted online, detailing how she could no longer drive
to the store because she was afraid of local police.

Barbour paid the ticket.

"I couldn't imagine how difficult it must be for a transgender person
in Idaho, it's difficult in California," Barbour said in a telephone
interview. "I would imagine the culture would be less forgiving
there."

A Nov. 28 court hearing was canceled, dismantling the platform Carlson
planned to use to fight the use of her former name.

"It's frustrating to me, this whole thing," said Huff, elected sheriff
in 2004 of this rural county, where the city of Payette includes 7,400
townspeople in a sugar beet-and onion-growing region on the Oregon
border.

The police officer who cited Carlson on Dec. 3, 2007 was doing his job
when including the male name, which is listed as an "aka" or "also
known as" in the county records, Huff said. "The only reason the
officer put that down is because it was on her driver's record," he
said.

Carlson was sent to the county jail four times in the past year. She
failed to appear for court-ordered community service, drove without
her license and was "semi-indignant" to a judge who held her in
contempt of court, Huff said.

Each time, her request to be housed with other women was denied and
she was placed in a cell by herself.

"She doesn't get to dictate to me, the sheriff, where she spends time
in jail," Huff said. "When she came in, we couldn't confirm or deny
her gender because we don't do strip searches on misdemeanors."

Her longest jail stay was a five-day sentence in September. Huff
requested a shorter sentence because Carlson wasn't eating. "I don't
believe this is the last we'll see of her," Huff said.

Dressed in black pants, a plaid shirt and hiking shoes, Carlson is
rail thin with long blond hair. Fine lines map her face, she
hand-rolls her cigarettes, eats little and survives on nine
travel-sized mugs of coffee a day. She lives on a $1,000-a-month
Social Security check, suffers from depression, emphysema and a heart
condition.

"Changing your gender is not going to solve all your problems," Carlson said.

Two small dogs, Shadow and Teeny Tiny Tina, scramble at her feet as
she flips through an album to a photograph of a cute blond in a knit
cap, the woman she became after the surgery. She worked three jobs,
saved up about $15,000 to castrate Daniel and get saline breast
implants for Catherine. She took estrogen until it became too
expensive.

She used to wear pretty dresses, fix herself up. Now she only has a
couple blouses and says she doesn't want to attract attention to
herself. She leaves her trailer about once every 10 days.

Carlson views her struggle against the local justice system as a fight
for rights granted to everyone else under the U.S. Constitution,
acceptance in the society she has secluded herself from for all these
years.

"You're going to have to make me one of 'We the People,'" Carlson said.

©2008 The Olympian

http://www.theolympian.com/northwest/story/698076.html
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