What the Gayle Newland sex deceit case means for transgender people

Guilty verdict shows that gender identity is a legal and ethical minefield when it comes to sex

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Gayle Newland, 25, has been convicted of three counts of sexual assault against a woman who had believed she was in a sexual relationship with a man. Newland’s case has thrown up some very thorny questions about gender and sexual consent – and about what, exactly, we are required by law to reveal to our sexual partners.

Newland had established contact with the victim, also a 25-year-old woman, through a Facebook profile set up in the name of a fictitious young man, "Kye Fortune". She later also used this profile to introduce herself to the victim, and they went on to become close. The two-year relationship that developed between the victim and "Kye" always required the victim wear a blindfold. "Kye's" justification for this unusual situation was that "he" was self-conscious about his body after suffering an accident.

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