LGBTQ PEOPLE ARE 3X
MORE LIKELY TO BE JAILED.

at risk of abuse,
many CAN'T AFFORD BAIL.

WE GET THEM OUT.

 
homeless_lost_bullied_scared_lonely_youth-652224.jpg!d.jpg
 


LGBTQ Freedom Fund posts bail to secure the safety and liberty of individuals in U.S. jails and immigration facilities.

We work to build a critical mass against the mass detention of LGBTQ individuals — a tangle of discrimination and poverty disproportionately puts them behind bars.


 

where We’ve freed people

LGBTQ Freedom Fund posted bond for people detained in states highlighted magenta.

LGBTQ Freedom Fund posted bond for people detained in states highlighted magenta.


mass incarceration: an LGBTQ issue



1 in 2

transgender prisoners is sexually abused.



1 in 2

homeless children is LGBTQ and
half of homeless people experience incarceration.

1 in 3

American adults has a criminal record and sexual minorities
are three times more likely to be incarcerated.

 

 
logo(3).png
 

bail OUTS

We post bond to secure the safety and liberty of low-income individuals in U.S. jails and immigration facilities, with focus on LGBTQ people.

Detained, even for a day, an individual is at risk of violence and losing employment, custody of children, and housing. Most suicides in jail occur within the first week.

While those with means are released from confinement, those in poverty face only injurious choices: languish at risk, or accept deportation or a guilty plea to get out of jail—often to crimes they didn’t commit.

For those in need, we provide case management and medical-legal-social services linkages.

Freedom Fund staffers outside the Broward County, Florida Judicial Complex.

Freedom Fund staffers outside the Broward County, Florida Judicial Complex.

 
 
 
 

 
logo.png
 

lgbtq criminalization

LGBTQ Freedom Fund raises awareness of the criminalization in America of LGBTQ folks, who are three times more likely to be incarcerated than other individuals.

This disparity is precipitated by poverty and discrimination in school, employment, policing, family and society at large.

The sweep of criminalization is extraordinary. At some point in their lives, 70 percent of low-income LGBTQ people are homeless by some estimates, and half of homeless people will be incarcerated.

LGBTQ criminalization manifests widespread violence against sexual minorities.

In the decade following the passage of the federal Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), around two million individuals were sexually assaulted in confinement—half are estimated to be LGBTQ. Moreover, LGBTQ youth in detention are 12 times more likely to be sexually assaulted.

Critically, with Black people five times more likely to be incarcerated, Black LGBTQ individuals occupy a reconstitutive crossing of inequity in the criminal legal system.

 

 
logo.png

lgbtq immigrants

With same-sex sexual activity illegal in over 70 nations, and widespread extralegal discrimination around the world, U.S. immigration detention is unduly felt by LGBTQ folks.

LGBTQ Freedom Fund pays bail across the U.S. to secure the freedom of LGBTQ migrants in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention, most of whom are people of color and fleeing anti-queer violence in their home countries.

This preempts victimization in custody and improves case outcomes — those free are more likely to get counsel and those with representation are more likely to win their asylum cases.

Problematically, ICE often uses its discretion to detain queer individuals.

In one 2015 study, ICE held 90 percent of LGBTQ immigrants when its automated system recommended detention of 18 percent; ICE held the general population against recommendation only about 16 percent of the time.

 
 

news

RFK HUMAN RIGHTS PARTNERS WITH LGBTQ Freedom Fund TO BAIL OUT DOZENS OF FLORIDIANS AMIDST CORONAVIRUs | PRESS RELEASE

By Minhee Cho, Media Relations Associate at RFK Human Rights

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, in partnership with the LGBTQ Freedom Fund, has taken urgent action to reduce jail populations across Florida in the face of the coronavirus pandemic, releasing dozens of people held in jail who cannot afford to pay their bail.


locking up sex workers hurts anti-trafficking Efforts | Opinion

By Scott Greenberg, Executive Director of the LGBTQ Freedom Fund

The Super Bowl sex trafficking myth does more harm than good. It misleads the public and harms sex workers, who are disproportionately sexual minorities.


 

immigration bill will harm LGBT people | Op-ed

By Scott Greenberg, Executive Director of LGBTQ Freedom Fund

Florida’s legislature is moving fast on a bill, SB 168, that requires local communities and police to do the job of the federal government in the deportation of immigrants…


 

Vote NO on $100 million Police HQ | OPINION

By LGBTQ Freedom Fund staff

The criminalization of homelessness disproportionately impacts low- and no-income LGBTQ people, 70 percent of whom are homeless at some point in their lives…


Honoring #BlackHistory by Investing in #BlackHealth | BLOG

By Tremaine Jones, Project Director of LGBTQ Freedom Fund

In the United States, mass incarceration has harmed black families, employment and negatively impacted the mental health of black people…


 

Repeal Florida’s anti-sodomy laws. They violate the U.S. Constitution. | Op-ed

By Scott Greenberg, Executive Director of LGBTQ Freedom Fund

This year, a criminal court in South Florida sentenced a man for having consensual sex with another man, holding that the defendant committed an unnatural and lascivious…