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ISSUE NO. 21
April 2026
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Reintegration

Ask Stacey: Help! Everyone Can See My Ankle Monitor!

Stacey answers your questions, on concealing ankle monitors and staying out of trouble on parole.

Stacey Stokes is a transgender girl who had a 10 and a half year sentence in a men’s prison. She has an undergraduate in creative writing and has recently been published extensively, most notably, “Nothing to hide, tales of trans and gender diverse Australia”, which was published and distributed internationally by Allen & Unwin. Stacey was a recipient of the 2025 Varuna Trans and Gender Diverse Fellowship to develop her manuscript, My World.

You may be following in an age-old tradition of this county by languishing in one of his Majesty’s prisons, but you are not forgotten!

You had questions, and we listened!

Question 1: Any suggestions for how to deal with looks/comments from people noticing your ankle monitor and ideas on how to disguise it?

So, as I’m transgender I feel like people are staring at me and not my ankle bracelets. So, you could just be trans? Failing that, I wear boots, high socks, or trousers. I also highly recommend a scrunchy (the big puffy hair ties) to put at the bottom of your GPS on your ankle to stop it banging and rubbing on your malleolus bones, the lumpy bones at the bottom of your ankle.

When it comes to the alcohol monitor it’s a bit trickier. It needs an unobstructed contact with your skin. So, boots were the best for me. If your trousers get in between the alcohol monitor and your skin, you risk a tamper alarm. If you get one of those, you will get a ‘please explain’ from parole. If that’s a common conversation, they ask questions like can you fulfil your conditions. You don’t need that headache.

Comment: Just so you know, no one has ever commented on my GPS. The only people who ever see it are at the beach, and they are not looking at my ankles.

You may be following in an age-old tradition of this county by languishing in one of his Majesty’s prisons, but you are not forgotten!

You had questions, and we listened!

Question 1: Any suggestions for how to deal with looks/comments from people noticing your ankle monitor and ideas on how to disguise it?

So, as I’m transgender I feel like people are staring at me and not my ankle bracelets. So, you could just be trans? Failing that, I wear boots, high socks, or trousers. I also highly recommend a scrunchy (the big puffy hair ties) to put at the bottom of your GPS on your ankle to stop it banging and rubbing on your malleolus bones, the lumpy bones at the bottom of your ankle.

When it comes to the alcohol monitor it’s a bit trickier. It needs an unobstructed contact with your skin. So, boots were the best for me. If your trousers get in between the alcohol monitor and your skin, you risk a tamper alarm. If you get one of those, you will get a ‘please explain’ from parole. If that’s a common conversation, they ask questions like can you fulfil your conditions. You don’t need that headache.

Comment: Just so you know, no one has ever commented on my GPS. The only people who ever see it are at the beach, and they are not looking at my ankles.

Question 2: Are there restrictions on parole prohibiting you from changing your appearance (e.g. hair dye, cosmetic surgery) and your name?

Appearance: I dye my hair a very dark red and that’s no real issue. It isn’t really a forever thing so no big deal if you get a haircut or grow a moustache. Plus, they can see you each reporting day, you don’t need permission. It’s not a parole condition not to dye your hair, shave your head or get lip filler.

Plastic surgery is different though. I had plastic surgery, and, by the way, getting my face cut off was not as cool as the movie Face Off led me to believe. It took ages to heal!

In reality, a lot of parole is asking for permission – and if you don’t ask but do it anyway, then you can get into trouble. If you explain you got hit by a car and didn’t plan to be hit by a car, then it’s not your fault. But if something was being planned for a while, like plastic surgery, then they will not be chuffed.

After the surgery, they will need a new photo. But that’s ok, because you will look amazing!

Name change: There IS legislation all over the place about name changes and it being subject to strict laws in prison, parole and all the different registers and orders. So, check. Ask everyone you are beholden to. It is complicated and each state has its own laws around it. But it will very, very likely be a breach of parole to change your name without written permission from EVERYONE who you has oversight over you, like the Adult Parole Board and registers. For example, in Victoria you will need written permission from the Adult Parole Board before you can apply through Births Deaths and Marriages to change your name – if you don’t, it’s an offence.

Question 3: What are the rules regarding interstate or overseas travel whilst on parole?

This ties into your amazing new photos of your new face! If you travel without letting parole know, all the country could get to see it on the afternoon news. A ‘please explain’ will be the least of your worries then.

I’ve travelled a fair bit while on parole for work. To Alice Springs, Sydney a few times, Adelaide and the Blue Mountains. Basically, I let parole know that I intended to travel. When, where, why. I provided them with all the supporting documents like letters from my employer, tickets, who I will be going etc. Everything was laid out in the open and then they assess it. They then give you a letter saying you have permission to leave the state to go to wherever you said you’re going to, and returning when you said you would. Or, they say no.

If you’re traveling for work or a deeply personal reason, they will be more likely to be amenable to it. If you’re driving from Melbourne to Sydney in your car to see your old cellie, then maybe not.

That’s all for this edition!

Question 2: Are there restrictions on parole prohibiting you from changing your appearance (e.g. hair dye, cosmetic surgery) and your name?

Appearance: I dye my hair a very dark red and that’s no real issue. It isn’t really a forever thing so no big deal if you get a haircut or grow a moustache. Plus, they can see you each reporting day, you don’t need permission. It’s not a parole condition not to dye your hair, shave your head or get lip filler.

Plastic surgery is different though. I had plastic surgery, and, by the way, getting my face cut off was not as cool as the movie Face Off led me to believe. It took ages to heal!

In reality, a lot of parole is asking for permission – and if you don’t ask but do it anyway, then you can get into trouble. If you explain you got hit by a car and didn’t plan to be hit by a car, then it’s not your fault. But if something was being planned for a while, like plastic surgery, then they will not be chuffed.

After the surgery, they will need a new photo. But that’s ok, because you will look amazing!

Name change: There IS legislation all over the place about name changes and it being subject to strict laws in prison, parole and all the different registers and orders. So, check. Ask everyone you are beholden to. It is complicated and each state has its own laws around it. But it will very, very likely be a breach of parole to change your name without written permission from EVERYONE who you has oversight over you, like the Adult Parole Board and registers. For example, in Victoria you will need written permission from the Adult Parole Board before you can apply through Births Deaths and Marriages to change your name – if you don’t, it’s an offence.

Question 3: What are the rules regarding interstate or overseas travel whilst on parole?

This ties into your amazing new photos of your new face! If you travel without letting parole know, all the country could get to see it on the afternoon news. A ‘please explain’ will be the least of your worries then.

I’ve travelled a fair bit while on parole for work. To Alice Springs, Sydney a few times, Adelaide and the Blue Mountains. Basically, I let parole know that I intended to travel. When, where, why. I provided them with all the supporting documents like letters from my employer, tickets, who I will be going etc. Everything was laid out in the open and then they assess it. They then give you a letter saying you have permission to leave the state to go to wherever you said you’re going to, and returning when you said you would. Or, they say no.

If you’re traveling for work or a deeply personal reason, they will be more likely to be amenable to it. If you’re driving from Melbourne to Sydney in your car to see your old cellie, then maybe not.

That’s all for this edition!

Holding On to the Dream

Holding On to the Dream

Holding On to the Dream

By Tabitha Lean & Debbie Kilroy
By Tabitha Lean & Debbie Kilroy

Everyone has the right to dream. To expect. To imagine a version of life where we get to decide who we are – not just live with who we’ve been told we are. That kind of dreaming is powerful. It keeps something alive in us. Something worth fighting for.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 12

2 MIN READ

The Road Back

The Road Back

The Road Back

By Dr Carollyne Youssef
By Dr Carollyne Youssef

Release can feel like a distant flicker – filled with both hope and uncertainty. But, when the gates open, freedom isn’t just liberating; it can be overwhelming.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 14

3 MIN READ

Healing After Release: My Story

Healing After Release: My Story

Healing After Release: My Story

By Stacey Stokes
By Stacey Stokes

What helped me was realising that there was nothing inherently wrong with me and that it was my brain trying to cope.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 10

5 MIN READ

Survival on the Outside: Family and Children

Survival on the Outside: Family and Children

Survival on the Outside: Family and Children

By Community Restorative Centre
By Community Restorative Centre

If you’re returning to your partner, it’s normal to feel anxious about living together again. Talk about your hopes and plans before release and keep talking once you go home. Listen to them, and get help early if you’re having relationship problems.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 3

16 MIN READ

Ask Stacey – Your Questions Answered!

By Stacey Stokes

You had questions, we listened! These answers are from my life (and are supposed to make you smile a bit!).

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 22

4 MIN READ

Finding Support After Release: Who Can Help and Where to Start

By Vacro

What you need to survive in prison is different to what you need on the outside. Many people have said that the first few weeks out were harder than their time inside. Coping with money problems, dealing with other people and feeling like you don’t belong in society can take a toll.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 20

5 MIN READ

Breaking the Cycle: How I Gave Myself Another Chance

By Gary Griffiths

Walking out of jail here in Perth wasn’t the moment my life changed.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 19

4 MIN READ

Finding Yourself Again

By Dr Carollyne Youssef

When the walls close in, both physically and mentally, it is easy to feel like the person you once was has been lost. For many, incarceration becomes not only a punishment but a pause. A disconnection from one’s true self.

Reintegration

ISSUE NO. 18

3 MIN READ