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Wednesday, September 17, 2014

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Sep. 16, 2014 12:58 PM ETTransgender teenager in confinement case escapes



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 (AP) — A troubled transgender girl whose imprisonment in Connecticut without criminal charges raised an outcry among her advocates escaped from custody Tuesday, state officials said.
The teenager has been moved several times since a judge in April ordered her to be imprisoned at the request of the Department of Children and Families, who said she was too violent to remain in their custody.
The teenager, most recently held at a facility for delinquent boys, escaped while attending her first day at a therapeutic program, according to an agency statement. It said police and department staff were working to locate her.
"We are hopeful we can quickly find her so that we can continue to engage her in the treatment programs that can help her heal from the many traumas she has experienced," the agency said.
The teenager has suffered sexual abuse and has a range of mental health needs, according to her attorney. The child advocate's office says her life has been marked by years of institutional or hospital care. The agency has identified her only generically as Jane Doe.
Since April, she has been relocated to several different detention facilities amid allegations she assaulted others and an outcry from supporters over the conditions of her confinement.
In May, she was moved from a mental health unit to another building at York Correctional Institution in East Lyme, where advocates had complained she was subject to solitary confinement that was damaging to her mental state. The Department of Children and Families denied she was in solitary confinement.
In June, she was moved to the Albert J. Solnit Children's Psychiatric Center, a Children and Families-run facility in Middletown.
In July, she was moved to Connecticut's juvenile home for boys after she was accused of assaulting another youth and a staff member. She was in a single room separated from the other residents at the Children's Psychiatric Center, the state's only secure facility for delinquent boys.
Associated Press

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