Trump Admin Facing Lawsuit Over Alleged Discrimination

You could not invent this story and expect anyone to believe it. A former MS-13 member — convicted in connection with the 2016 abduction and murder of a 14-year-old — is suing the Trump administration, and it’s not about immigration policy. It’s about pronouns.


Oscar Contreras Aguilar, serving a 21-year sentence, claims the Bureau of Prisons is guilty of “discrimination” because it refuses to recognize him as a woman. In other words, a man who once pledged allegiance to one of the most sadistic criminal organizations on earth now wants the federal government to validate his “gender identity.”


Contreras Aguilar, known in gang circles as “Atrevido,” didn’t join just any street crew. MS-13 — Mara Salvatrucha — is infamous for its unrelenting brutality, operating in up to 15 countries and partnering with Mexican cartels for drug trafficking. Initiates are often required to commit machete murders or torture and dismember rivals. The gang traffics women and children, using them as commodities in a global black market of misery.


In the D.C. area, MS-13 has been behind some of the most horrific crimes in recent memory: a Montgomery County man decapitated, stabbed over 100 times, his heart cut out; teens in Fairfax County tortured and slaughtered on video. The gang doesn’t merely kill — it revels in the spectacle of violence.


Now, one of its former soldiers wants to take the federal government to court because prison officials won’t indulge his self-declared womanhood. It’s a grotesque inversion of justice: the same system that had to lock him up to protect the public is now being accused of “oppression” for refusing to rewrite biological reality.

And this isn’t just some paperwork nuisance. If successful, such lawsuits set precedents that ripple through the justice system — raising questions about housing violent offenders in women’s facilities, granting them access to vulnerable inmates, and forcing taxpayers to bankroll the charade.