CH - agreed not to beat yourself up. You're a solid dude who deserves a chance at success, however you choose to define that.
AA is not for everyone. Bluelight's really the best fellowship I've found; unfortunately most of you live too far away to see regularly! My friends have been super supportive, and now they know who to call when they need a designated driver.

I really don't care if others drink in front of me but I do avoid bars and alcohol-heavy events, at least for now. I'm far from stodgy even though I don't drink anymore.
Priest, I gave it to her. It is very common to swap numbers in AA, particularly women exchanging numbers with women, so as to avoid creeps. Since Casey lives as a woman and is a member of an all-women's homegroup (mine is coed, and no creeps there), I didn't feel weird about it.
Already talked to one of the women who I believe I will choose to ask to sponsor me. I've clicked well with two who are 5+ years sober, employed professionally, married with families. Their reaction was the same as all of ours - that the sex crime thing is, well, disgusting. "Energy vampire" is an absolutely apt description. Casey has absolutely no filter. In the first 5 minutes I talked to her, she disclosed that she had HIV and Hep C, that she got it from shooting dope, told me where she scores (I'd never need to know that as I don't use heroin) and that sometimes she is a sex worker, and that she still has a dick. 8( All she knew about me was my name, the town I live in and that I'm newly sober. I don't understand why she told me about her dick. I don't care about her damn dick.
I have no plans to invite anyone from AA to my house except my sponsor when I choose her. My housemate and I don't invite people over whom we do not know VERY well. It's a basic security measure for two females who share a house and it is common courtesy as well.
AA meetings really vary in my limited experience. If you're not presently drinking and handling it well on your own, you may or may not benefit from going to a meeting. There IS a lot of groupthink in AA, which in my opinion gives the newly sober something to focus on besides drinking. People share their personal stories, many of which would scare someone straight. The solidarity of all of us who wish to be sober and take the program seriously is really inspiring to me. No one is stuffy and a surprising amount of laughter happens in those rooms.
My overall conclusion is that Casey is an attention whore. I'm sympathetic to the fact that she has two terminal illnesses at age 26. I'm sympathetic to the fact that she is an alcoholic and an addict. I know she is struggling with being both intersexed and transgendered; she's in a major identity crisis. NONE of this gives her an excuse to be a creepy leech and to make others uncomfortable. The smokers in the group all get annoyed when she asks to bum one (heh, I'm quitting that too - what the hell happened

). Basically if you have something she wants, she will make you feel like a piece of shit if you don't give her at least half. I can easily imagine her getting her ass kicked in certain drug situations.
Priest, I re-read what you said about a group "moderator" and just realized that one of the first people I met in AA is a high-level member called a General Service Representative. It's an elected position for someone who is very serious about the program. I see him at my homegroup all the time and he initially cautioned me about the "Skid Row" meeting, said there were a lot of people who had been incarcerated for serious violent and property crimes and to be careful. I expect I'll see him today, and I'll report back on what he has to say about this situation.

Onward and upward.