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MS-13 Member Sues Trump to Be ‘Recognized’ as Woman

MS-13 Member Sues Trump to Be ‘Recognized’ as Woman

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The Frank Staff

The Frank Staff.
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The Frank Staff
author

The Frank Staff

The Frank Staff.
[email protected]
@TheFrank_com

Aug 13, 2025

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An MS-13 gang member currently serving time for murder is now demanding to be “recognized” as a woman — and is suing the President of the United States to make that happen.

According to a report published on Sunday by Reduxx Magazine, Oscar Contreras Aguilar was sentenced to serve 21 years in prison for the kidnapping and murder of a 14-year-old. He has filed a lawsuit against both President Donald Trump and the Bureau of Prisons, claiming that they have “refused to recognize” his gender identity.

Contreras Aguilar was a known member of Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) — a transnational criminal gang known for ruthlessness and brutality — under the alias “Atrevido.” He was arrested in 2017 in connection with the 2016 murders of 17-year-old Edvin Mendez — who was believed to be a member of a rival gang — and 14-year-old Sergio Triminio, who Contreras Aguilar and other members of MS-13 believed was cooperating with law enforcement.

It was not until 2024 — after filing a number of complaints alleging attempts on his life and other issues — that Contreras Aguilar took on the name Fendi G. Skyy and claimed to identify as female. He then began filing complaints stating that trans-identifying prisoners were mistreated in comparison to other prisoners.

“Transgender women prisoners in men’s prisons,” he claimed, are often met with “harsher, more degrading treatment than their cisgender counterparts.”

Prior to changing his identity, Contreras Aguilar claimed that fellow MS-13 members had attempted to kill him on several occasions after discovering that he had been acting as an informant. He also filed a legal complaint against then Attorney General Merrick Garland in 2022, claiming that he had been working as an informant in 2016 and 2017, and that his 21-year sentence had been issued as a result of a plea agreement.

“While in the community, [Contreras Aguilar] was working with the Suffolk County Police Department and the Long Island Gang Task Force of the FBI in New York as an informant,” the complaint read, in part.

That suit was dismissed in early 2024, and within months, Contreras Aguilar announced that he identified as a woman.

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