Queer history project digs into the struggles of Edmonton's bank ...

9 Jun 2024

Edmonton

Christina White, an Edmontonian who transitioned in 1993, turned to robbing banks after failing to make a living due to her new gender identity. But she still applied for jobs while doing so.

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Photo CBC.ca
Trans woman Christine White turned to crime in desperate move to survive

Christine White, photographed by Ron Levine for the Prisoners of Age project in 2003. (Ron Levine Photography)

After she transitioned in the 1990s, an Edmonton woman faced severe difficulties socially and also struggled to make a living. This was despite having a previous distinguished 20-year career in construction that had ended in a managerial position.

In 1997, in a desperate move, Christine White decided to rob a bank. 

"In her mind, she wasn't actually victimizing an individual. This was a large corporation. It was a drop in the bucket," said Morgan Evans, a research assistant with the Edmonton Queer History Project. 

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Photo CBC.ca

White's story is one of many the history project has uncovered. Researchers, in collaboration with MacEwan University, are digging into archives to learn more about the life and times of Edmonton's 2SLGBTQ+ community over the past 50 years.

Evans stumbled on White's story while going through newspaper articles on ProQuest, an online database that includes academic journals, newspapers and other scholarly resources.

The discovery led Evans through newspaper and legal archives across Canada, revealing the life of an Edmontonian who, denied acceptance, had turned to crime.

In this November 1998 newspaper clipping, a Belleville, Ont., police inspector said the Bookworm Bandit's robberies were well-planned. (Calgary Herald/ ProQuest)
Kept applying for jobs during crime spree

White was meticulous. Disguised as a man, she visited banks with a receipt book that contained her demands. This led to newspapers giving her nickname Bookworm Bandit.

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Photo CBC.ca

She used a getaway bike that led her to a getaway car. She would hide in a suburb before leaving the city on the same day.

Over a year and a half, she stole roughly $75,000 in currency from 31 banks stretching across the country from B.C. to Ontario.

WATCH | Edmonton bank was first of many robbed by Christine White:

The curious case of the Bookworm Bandit
Morgan Evans of the Edmonton Queer History Project spoke to CBC's Tara McCarthy about the curious case of the Bookworm Bandit — a trans woman who turned to robbing banks in the 1990s after struggling to find employment.

Although she was very good at robbing banks, White still just wanted a normal job and a regular life, Evans said. She continued applying for jobs during her crime spree but never got hired. 

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Photo CBC.ca

She was able to elude authorities in part because nobody could confirm if she was a man or woman. Bank tellers confused details of her appearance. That led to a lot of derogatory comments in newspaper articles about her appearance and identity as a transgender woman, Evans said.

A newspaper clipping of police looking for who they believed was a man robbing banks across Canada. The bank robber was Christine White, a trans woman from Edmonton. (Calgary Herald/ ProQuest)

White was eventually caught in Belleville, Ont., in 1998. In 2002, after pleading guilty to a total of 39 charges, she was sentenced to 11 years, with three years taken off for time served, according to the Globe and Mail.

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Photo CBC.ca

White was sent to a women's prison, but for the first year was in protective custody, which Evans said was solitary confinement for 23½ hours a day in a room the size of an average bathroom.

"By psychological standards, that's torturous," Evans said.

Her first request parole was denied. "There is a lot of mention of her being angry about the discrimination she faced and what they viewed as the consequences of her transition," Evans said. "And that was a part of why she was denied parole."

White eventually got parole in 2007 and Evans said that's where the researchers lost the thread of her story. "We don't know what's happened since," she said.

Kristopher Wells, Canada Research Chair for the Public Understanding of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth at MacEwan University, said the importance of stories like White's in understanding the struggles faced by members of the 2SLGBTQ+ community to gain the rights they have today. 

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Photo CBC.ca

"While we enter into Pride [Month] as a time of celebration, it's really important that we remember our history as well," Wells said.

Evans said they had to be mindful of balancing audience perspectives when telling White's story.

Where some would see her as an underdog, others still view her as a criminal. But it's important to emphasize the necessity of survival, he said. 

LISTEN | Edmonton Queer History Project discovers the Bookworm Bandit:

Edmonton AM8:23The infamous case of the Bookworm Bandit

June is Pride Month, so for the next few weeks we'll dive deep into Edmonton's queer history. Today, we're focused on the story of Christine White, who also came to be known as the Bookworm Bandit. Morgan Evans is a research assistant with the Edmonton Queer History Project. Kristopher Wells is Canada Research Chair for the Public Understanding of Sexual and Gender Minority Youth at MacEwan University.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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Photo CBC.ca

Kashmala Fida Mohatarem is a reporter and associate producer with CBC Edmonton.

With files from Ishita Verma

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