Scotland’s SNP government faces scrutiny in a judicial review at Edinburgh’s Court of Session, where women’s rights group For Women Scotland argues the current transgender prisoner policy endangers female inmates by allowing biological males into women’s jails based on individual risk assessments.
Lawyer Aidan O’Neill KC slammed the guidance as “institutional neglect and contempt for women’s rights,” accusing ministers of using vulnerable women as “pawns for political gain” to appease radical gender ideology. The policy, tightened after the 2023 Isla Bryson scandal—a male rapist housed in a women’s prison—still permits trans women (biological males) in female facilities unless deemed a high risk.
O’Neill highlighted horrific cases: violent male offenders, including murderers, placed alongside women, risking safety and dignity in an “ultra-vulnerable population.” He urged judges to declare the policy unlawful, aligning with a Supreme Court ruling defining sex biologically and protecting single-sex spaces. Government counsel Gerry Moynihan defended the approach, claiming a blanket ban would breach human rights and discriminate against trans individuals. He insisted the policy balances safety without automatic exclusions.
This hearing, spanning three days, exposes the SNP’s capitulation to progressive agendas that prioritize transgender demands over biological reality and women’s protections. Amid broader UK debates on gender self-ID’s dangers—from sports invasions to prison threats—For Women Scotland’s challenge demands a return to sanity, safeguarding female prisoners from ideological experiments that erode justice and common sense.














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