Gender-critical former police officer takes Mahmood to court | The Telegraph

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Harry Miller, a free speech campaigner, was questioned under caution by Lincolnshire Police after welcoming the dismissal of a transgender police officer who had conducted a campaign of harassment against him.

There was no evidence that Mr Miller had committed any crime and he was subsequently released with no further action.

But more than a year later, he discovered Lincolnshire Police had formally recorded the matter as a hate crime and stalking offence, which could show up on any enhanced DBS check.

Mr Miller is now taking legal action against Lincolnshire Police to have the hate crime expunged from his record.

He has also lodged a judicial review against the Home Office to demand the entire system of recording hate crimes is changed to bring it into line with other offences.

Mr Miller, who helped found the Fair Cop campaign group to remove politics from policing, has already won a significant victory over the way police handle non-crime hate incidents (NCHIs).

But he decided to turn his attention to actual hate crime offences after discovering one had been recorded against him, despite there being no evidence to support the allegation.

Source: Gender-critical former police officer takes Mahmood to court

Prehistoric women’s arms ‘stronger than those of today’s elite rowers’ | Archaeology | The Guardian (reported in Nov 2017)

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Prehistoric women had stronger arms than elite female rowing teams do today thanks to the daily grind of farming life, researchers have revealed, shedding light on their role in early communities.

The study of ancient bones suggests that manual agricultural work had a profound effect on the bodies of women living in central Europe between about the early neolithic and late iron age, from about 5,300BC to AD100.

The results, published in the journal Science Advances, reveal that while the arm bones of women from the neolithic to the late iron age showed variations in strength, they were stronger than those of rowers, football players, and non-athletic women for their left arm, and the latter two groups for their right. Indeed, the neolithic women had arm bones about 30% stronger than non-athletic living women.

“We really saw them standing out through that first 5,500 years of farming, just really consistently stronger arm bones than the majority of the living women, including the rowers,” said Macintosh. “Medieval women had much weaker arm bones than those previous prehistoric women; they looked a lot more like modern, recreationally active women.”

While grinding grain using stone tools was likely to be a key factor in boosting women’s bone strength, the researchers add that other strenuous occupations including pottery making, planting and harvesting crops, and tending livestock could also have contributed.

[Ed: Not to mention carrying babies before there were cribs and prams.]

Source: Prehistoric women’s arms ‘stronger than those of today’s elite rowers’ | Archaeology | The Guardian

The Dark Side of the Global Surrogacy and Fertility Industry – The New York Times

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

In the 1990s, India became the undisputed hub of commercial surrogacy; the country legalized the practice in 2002, as parents also flocked there for low-cost I.V.F. packages. But over time, scandals mounted — reports of abused and unpaid surrogates, sick or abandoned babies and mixed-up embryos — and in 2012, India began to regulate the practice. So, the industry adapted, hopscotching to Thailand, Mexico and Nepal, all of which soon experienced their own controversies. After a 2015 earthquake stranded dozens of Indian surrogates and newborns in Nepal, Israel airlifted 26 babies, leaving the surrogates behind; Nepal banned the practice soon afterward. India and Thailand banned commercial surrogacy for foreigners in 2015. In 2016, Cambodia followed, as did the sole state in Mexico that had allowed it, completely cutting off the trade.

The market reconstituted in Russia, which became popular with intended parents, particularly from China. In 2015, the Chinese Communist Party amended its one-child policy to allow all married couples to have two children, while the collapse of the Russian ruble, coupled with the rising incomes of China’s growing middle class, made Russia an attractive destination. The demand for Asian eggs there grew so great, women were often stimulated locally — in Thailand, Taiwan, China or Kyrgyzstan — flown to cities in Russia, operated on and then sent back on a plane. After a surrogate-born baby died of unknown causes, Russia banned commercial surrogacy for foreigners in 2022, leaning heavily on tropes of “traditional values.” That same year, the country banned egg donations in surrogate pregnancies for its own citizens, pushing Russians to join the throngs of couples seeking treatment abroad.

After the Russian market closed, the influx adapted again, flowing into Ukraine, which had already attracted intended parents from America and Europe after it legalized the practice in 2002. Ukraine, home to a population of 41 million rife with blue-eyed blondes — the ultimate stereotypically desired phenotype — quickly became a hub of both eggs and surrogacy, with nearly 3,000 donor cycles and more than 2,000 children born to surrogates each year before the war. Unlike many other countries, Ukraine amended its regulations in 2013 to prohibit women from selling eggs or being a surrogate unless they already had one healthy child. The change was primarily a marketing gimmick guaranteeing the donors’ or surrogates’ “proven” fertility, but it also happened to protect against some of the medical and ethical concerns tied to participating in these markets, including future infertility.
When Russia invaded Ukraine in the middle of the night in February 2022, leaving foreign parents stranded far from their infants, the tiny former Soviet state of Georgia experienced an avalanche of interest. The rush was overwhelming. The country simply did not have enough wombs, so clinics and agencies began importing them.
In general, surrogates spoke about their own situations almost as if they were property. I sat with two Kenyan surrogates who explained their understanding of the system — that they would be “sold” from recruiter to agency to clinic. When I asked them how they would be OK with this, they said it was better than being abused as housemaids in Dubai. From a surrogate’s perspective of her rights in this process, once she arrives in Georgia, she can expect to undergo three embryo transfers before the agency will send her home. If a surrogate arrives and a clinic disqualifies her in the initial health check, or after one transfer, the agency might send her home, but more likely it would try to find a different clinic to accept her. This is foremost a business, and it costs the agency money to bring her over, house her and feed her, after all.
Most of the 30 women I spoke with who had become or tried to become surrogates in Georgia had trouble communicating or advocating for themselves.
As I was leaving their apartment, a coordinator called and threatened the women for what they had told me. One of the other surrogates in the apartment had reported on them. Days later, they said the clinic warned them it would withhold payment to any surrogate who spoke to me if anything negative about them were published.
Surrogates had their horror stories, while intended parents had theirs. There were important facts that agencies had failed to disclose to them — like that their surrogate was a teenager. Or the couple who showed up at the hospital to discover that their surrogate had no teeth. There were children born with birth defects that the intended parents believed were covered up by the clinics, or babies who died soon after birth. I heard stories about the wrong donor eggs being used, surrogates inducing early labor to speed up the process or even aborting embryo transfers so they could move from clinic to clinic, collecting payment for each transfer without going through with the pregnancy.
The Georgian Parliament was poised to regulate the industry in 2023, but the draft law mysteriously died.
“This is a multimillion-dollar business,” Baia Pataraia, the director of Georgia’s leading women’s NGO, Sapari, which represented the women, told me. “Somebody is making lots of money, and that’s why commercial surrogacy with very few regulations and nonexistent monitoring remains. If they wanted to regulate it, they could.”
An agent who worked in Tbilisi until recently, and who requested anonymity because of her ongoing involvement in the industry worldwide, told me she was “99.9 percent” certain that some women in Georgia were having eggs retrieved without their consent. Egg theft happens all over the world — whether it’s unauthorized retrievals or misuse of the eggs retrieved with consent.
It’s not unusual for survivors of trafficking to be trafficked again. I asked Eve and Eye whether they would compare their experience in Georgia with the one they had in Bahrain, where promises of massage work led to forced prostitution.
They immediately declared that Georgia was worse than Bahrain: It was so isolating, as they didn’t know who was their friend and who was secretly reporting on them.
But worse, in Georgia they really had no idea what had been done to their bodies. Sex work was self-explanatory, but white pills, injections and suppositories could be anything.

Source: The Dark Side of the Global Surrogacy and Fertility Industry – The New York Times

High Court hearing on Kenwood Ladies’ Pond this week | Sex Matters | UK

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Following the For Women Scotland case, some organisations have been bringing their policies into line with the law. Others have been making the excuse of waiting for EHRC guidance.

But the City of London, which runs the men’s, women’s and mixed bathing ponds on Hampstead Heath, doubled down on its “trans women are women” stance.

Despite admitting that its policy of admitting swimmers to the single-sex ponds and changing rooms on the basis of gender self-identity “was based on what has turned out to be a misinterpretation of the law”, it put up new signs in July saying:

“Those who identify as women are welcome to swim at the Kenwood Ladies’ Pond. The Ladies’ Pond is open to biological women and trans women with the protected characteristic of gender reassignment under the Equality Act 2010”.

This means that fully intact males are allowed to swim with, and use communal changing rooms and showers shared with, women and girls.

We are challenging the lawfulness of this policy.

A one-day “permission hearing” will take place on Wednesday 17th December at the Royal Courts of Justice in London.

You can read the papers for the case:

  • our statement of facts and grounds
  • Maya Forstater’s witness statement
  • our skeleton argument.

Several women told us about upsetting experiences of encountering trans-identifying men at the pond:

  • A GP who has given a witness statement asking for anonymity says that in July 2019 she saw a man in a tight-fitting bikini bottom visibly displaying his male genitalia being helped by a group of women bathers to fit a bikini top. He entered the women’s changing room and stood staring at a group of naked teenage girls. She reported her concerns to the lifeguards, who said the person was entitled to be there.

Women shouldn’t have to worry about whether a man in the women’s changing rooms is there for nefarious purposes or to affirm his womanly identity. In either case he is breaching her privacy and dignity and she should not be accused of being a “transphobe” for objecting.

There is a mixed pond that can be used by individuals of either sex.

Source: High Court hearing on Kenwood Ladies’ Pond this week

Why can someone in suburban Sydney own 6 guns legally? New laws might change that | The Conversation

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Australians have watched on in horror as more details have come to light about the shooters in the Bondi terror attacks.

As people grapple with the tragedy, many wonder how such a thing could have happened in a country that has long prided itself on its tough gun laws.

The 50-year-old father, Sajid Akram, and 24-year-old son, Naveed Akram, had six guns. Police confirmed all of them were registered firearms. The father, who was fatally shot by police, had a recreational hunting licence and was a member of a gun club.

National Cabinet has since committed to a raft of new gun laws, including renegotiating the National Firearms Agreement, caps on the amount of firearms any one person can own and limiting open-ended licensing.

Gun control laws vary slightly in each state and territory, but are broadly similar. We’ll look here at the laws in New South Wales.

The first step is to apply for a firearms licence. As part of this, authorities will conduct a background check to ensure there’s no criminal history, including mental health orders or domestic violence charges.

The applicant must also pass the “fit and proper person” test. NSW Police says this test checks someone is “of good character, law abiding, honest, and shows good judgement”.

If these standards are met, a firearms licence is granted.

But in order to actually buy a firearm, people must apply for a “permit to acquire”. This is linked to the specific firearm they’d like to purchase. Subsequent guns do not need a waiting period as long as it’s in the same category they already have approval to own.

They must also pass a safety course, with both practical and theoretical components, including a written test.

Firearms, once acquired, must be stored in a specific way. Guns cannot be stored while loaded, for instance, and ammunition must be kept in a separate safe.

Finally, someone must have a “genuine reason” to buy a firearm. These include working as a primary producer, or participating in recreational hunting, among others. They need to prove a genuine reason for each and every firearm purchase. Personal protection is not a a genuine reason.

Applicants need to prove their reason is truthful. This may be proof of membership to a gun club, or a letter with express permission from the landowner on whose property they intend to hunt.

Importantly, if someone holds a firearm licence for recreational purposes, they must compete in a certain amount of competitions each year. In NSW, it’s two to four.

It’s not uncommon for people to have more than one firearm. Licensed firearm owners in NSW have an average of about four, according to a 2025 report.

Source: Why can someone in suburban Sydney own 6 guns legally? New laws might change that

London child protection body scraps ‘gender ideology’ training after legal challenge | GB News

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

London’s child-protection body has abandoned its gender training programme, which advised frontline professionals to learn neopronouns such as “zirself” and “eirself,” as well as family and relationship titles including “dommy,” “zaza,” “nibling,” “datefriend,” and “loveperson,” following a legal threat.

The city-wide child protection partnership — the Safeguarding Children Partnership (LSCP) — which sets training standards for safeguarding professionals across the capital, had included these terms in an online course offered to staff in key safeguarding positions, including teachers, social workers, and NHS staff.

However, last night it issued a legal letter stating that the programme would be stopped following the legal threat.

The Bayswater Support Group, representing over 800 parents of trans-identified children, claimed the course — “Safeguarding LGBTQ+ Children” — was inaccurate, unlawful, incomplete, and politicised, and could steer staff toward unsafe practices involving vulnerable children.

Bayswater Support Group is represented by solicitor Paul Conrathe, who said the training conflicted with statutory guidance and the independent Cass Review into gender services.

Source: London child protection body scraps ‘gender ideology’ training after legal challenge

Filmed without her knowledge in a fitting room, her testimony exposes a worrying scourge | The Body Optimist

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

The story of Lilou, filmed without her knowledge in a fitting room, recently shocked internet users. By sharing her experience, she revealed a chilling reality: miniature cameras, hidden in everyday objects, are now being used to film women without their consent, sometimes in places as private as fitting rooms or public restrooms.

In her TikTok video, the young woman (@lilouboutiin) recounts that she was shopping with her mother and sister on a perfectly ordinary afternoon. Nothing could have prepared her for what was about to happen. While changing in a fitting room, she noticed the sole of a man’s shoe protruding slightly under the partition. At first, she didn’t pay any attention, thinking it was simply someone waiting for a relative in the next fitting room.

But as she got closer, she noticed a disturbing detail: between the shoelaces was a tiny camera. It was then that she realized she was being filmed. Panicked, the man fled. Lilou’s mother tried to catch him, without success, before a stranger intervened and managed to stop the suspect until the security guards arrived.

Cybersecurity experts point out that tiny “spy cameras” can be easily purchased online and concealed in ordinary objects: pens, watches, buttons, or shoes. Calls to increase security in fitting rooms are growing, as are demands for retailers to install warning signs and increase surveillance of their premises.

Source: Filmed without her knowledge in a fitting room, her testimony exposes a worrying scourge

White couple faked DNA test to keep mixed-race surrogate baby | The Times

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

The couple, referred to as Mr P and Mrs P in the judgment to protect the toddler’s identity, met the surrogate, Ms T, on a Facebook group for surrogacy in June 2021 after struggling for three years to conceive naturally. Ms T agreed to become a surrogate mother for the couple and entered into a surrogacy agreement that included a clause stating she would “abstain from sexual intercourse” from that time until a pregnancy was confirmed.

Mr P was named as J’s father on the birth certificate. But by the time the couple came to apply to the courts for a parental order in May 2023, which was required under laws pertaining to surrogacy to register them as the legal parents, doubts were being expressed about J’s paternity by the paternal grandmother. The couple said they had noted J’s skin darkening but preferred to think this reflected Mr P’s olive skin, the judgment said.

During the parental order application, Mr and Mrs P were asked to submit a DNA test proving paternity. But after it emerged they had used a DNA test which was not court-approved, that had confirmed Mr P as the father, they expressed a wish to the family court in January last year to withdraw their parental order application and instead apply for an adoption order.

The judgment further reveals that in June last year the couple filed a statement saying that “although they had not had a second DNA test, they now accepted that Mr P is not J’s biological father”. They stated that “as J has grown, J’s complexion has obviously darkened and it has become apparent that they are of mixed race”.

Under current laws, “intended parents” can obtain a parental order to register them as the legal parents of a surrogate baby as long as they have a genetic link to the child and can prove they only paid “reasonable expenses” to the surrogate.
Helen Gibson from Surrogacy Concern, a group campaigning for surrogacy to be banned in Britain, said: “This case exemplifies everything that is wrong with the UK’s so-called altruistic surrogacy model. It seems nobody in this arrangement considered the needs and rights of the child.”
[Ed: Another case demonstrating the pitfalls of engaging in an unconscionable trade in babies.]

Source: White couple faked DNA test to keep mixed-race surrogate baby

A Surrogacy Firm Told Parents-to-Be Their Money Was Safe. Suddenly, It Vanished. – The New York Times

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Micah Nerio had known since his early 30s that he wanted to be a father, even if he did not have a partner. He spent a decade saving up to pursue surrogacy, an expensive process where he would create embryos with his sperm and a donor’s eggs to transfer to a woman who would carry the pregnancy.
Eventually, Mr. Nerio, now 40, selected a surrogate, who is due to give birth to his baby next month. Since 2022, he has sent over $118,000 to the agency that found his surrogate — money that went into an account to cover her medical bills, monthly compensation and other costs through the end of the pregnancy.
About a third of that money disappeared on Friday when the agency, Surro Connections, closed without warning. Mr. Nerio received a brief email stating that the business, which had operated for 13 years, had “no ability” to return clients’ funds. He had no way to retrieve the $44,000 left in his account with the agency, which was to be used to pay his surrogate’s remaining expenses.
Surro Connections, based in Portland, Ore., was, until this month, a well-regarded surrogacy agency with clients from around the world. Now, many have lost tens of thousands of dollars, and their surrogates are in the middle of pregnancies.
In May 2024, the leadership of Men Having Babies became aware that Surro held patient money in-house. The organization advised Ms. Hall-Greenberg that she would need to start using a third-party escrow accounts if she wanted to remain on the group’s council of industry advisers, said Mr. Poole-Dayan, the group’s president.
Ms. Hall-Greenberg declined, he said, and was removed from the advisory council last June.
Some surrogacy agencies have begun offering to waive administrative fees, which can cost thousands of dollars, to Surro clients who transfer their contracts. But the parents are still responsible for their surrogate’s medical bills and compensation, which make up the bulk of expenses.
Over the weekend, Mr. Nerio began working with one of those companies. He is excited for his child’s birth but angry at the betrayal he experienced. He will tap into his savings to cover his losses.
“At night, I’m staring at the ceiling thinking, Is $44,000 really gone?” he said. “Hopefully it will sting a little less once I’m holding a baby in my arms.”
[Ed: Oh dear – imagine losing money for doing something completely unconscionable! Are we meant to feel sorry for them? If there were justice these men would be locked up and all these agencies would go broke.]

Source: A Surrogacy Firm Told Parents-to-Be Their Money Was Safe. Suddenly, It Vanished. – The New York Times

Magistrate punished for sharing gender-critical video on WhatsApp | The Telegraph | UK

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

A magistrate who has campaigned to protect single-sex spaces has been reprimanded for sending a “transphobic” video on a parish council Whatsapp group.

Jane Taylor, a former police chief inspector and independent councillor, was reprimanded over the video which was said to include “transphobic” views by a “third party”.

A judicial investigation ruled that she had shared the video without “properly considering” its impact despite being aware of its content.

She claimed she shared the video at the request of other councillors as it was about the protection of single sex spaces, on which she was campaigning as a local councillor, rather than transgender issues.

She also alleged the complaint against her was politically motivated and intended to “suppress debate”.

However, the Judicial Conduct Investigations Office (JCIO) ruled that her “unapologetic” defence of the video demonstrated a lack of due diligence and insight and reprimanded her.

A reprimand is the second most serious disciplinary measure, just below a JP being removed from their post as a magistrate.

Source: Magistrate punished for sharing gender-critical video on WhatsApp