The Justice Department pulled its subpoena for medical records of patients seeking gender affirming care at Children's Hospital Los Angeles.
Protesters gather outside of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles to oppose the hospital’s decision to halt intake of patients under 19 seeking gender-affirming care, on Feb. 13, 2025. Photo by J.W. Hendricks for CalMattersFamilies sued to block the Justice Department’s subpoena for records of young transgender patients.
The agency agreed to drop its request through 2029. Welcome to CalMatters, the only nonprofit newsroom devoted solely to covering issues that affect all Californians. Sign up for Transgender patients of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles secured a win this week after the U.S. Department of Justice agreed to end its efforts to obtain personal and medical information of more than 3,000 young patients. to more than 20 medical providers that offered gender-affirming care for minors. At the time, the department said it was doing so to investigate “healthcare fraud” and “false statements.” Seven families whose children have received gender-affirming services at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles sued in November to quash the subpoena to protect their information. The department never provided evidence of fraud, said Khadijah Silver, director of Gender Justice & Health Equity at Lawyers for Good Government, one of the firms representing families in the class action lawsuit. The hospital did not not turn over the requested documents. “It was basically a fishing expedition,” Silver said. “Without any probable cause, they did not have the authority to be seeking medical information.” The department subpoena demanded the hospital provide a large range of documents, including patient intake forms, insurance claims and “documents sufficient to identify each patient who was prescribed puberty blockers or hormone therapy,” court documents show.Get California’s most essential headlines without feeling overwhelmed.“This is one piece of a large, very important puzzle, but it does allow our clients to hold on to their basic legal right to medical privacy,” Silver said. the Trump administration’s request to subpoena the same information from Children’s National Hospital in Washington D.C. The subpoena is not the only federal action that has targeted transgender patients and their providers. Last year, the Trump administration issued an executive order that threatened to pull federal funding from medical institutions that provide gender-affirming care. Attorney General Rob BontaAfter federal actions escalated, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles closed the doors to its Center for Transyouth Health and Development last July, leaving about 3,000 young patients in limbo. Other providers in the state “The shutdown came despite efforts my office took over recent months to assure that they were protected and required to provide gender-affirming care,” Bonta said at the time. Bonta’s office has filed amicus briefs opposing the Trump administration’s attempts to subpoena medical records of gender-affirming care at other hospitals includingWe are focused on California issues.We probe and reveal the actions and inactions of powerful people and institutions, and the consequences that follow.Ana B. Ibarra covers health care for CalMatters. Her reporting largely focuses on issues around access to care and affordability. She joined CalMatters in 2020 after four years at Kaiser Health News. She...We love that you want to share our stories with your readers. Hundreds of publications republish our work on a regular basis.Credit our authors at the top of the article and any other byline areas of your publication. In the byline, we prefer “By Author Name, CalMatters.” If you’re republishing guest commentary who was prescribed puberty blockers or hormone therapy,” court documents show. Under the agreement, filed in federal court Thursday, the Justice Department will withdraw requests for documents that identified patients or their families through 2029. Attorneys representing patients and their families have moved to dismiss the case. “This is one piece of a large, very important puzzle, but it does allow our clients to hold on to their basic legal right to medical privacy,” Silver said. The settlement unfolded the same week that a judge in Baltimore rejected the Trump administration’s request to subpoena the same information from Children’s National Hospital in Washington D.C. The subpoena is not the only federal action that has targeted transgender patients and their providers. Last year, the Trump administration issued an executive order that threatened to pull federal funding from medical institutions that provide gender-affirming care. Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit over the summer seeking to block the order. The federal government has also issued orders that recognize only two biological sexes and prevent transgender girls and women from participating in women’s sports. A third order threatens federal funds for schools that support transgender youth. After federal actions escalated, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles closed the doors to its Center for Transyouth Health and Development last July, leaving about 3,000 young patients in limbo. Other providers in the state have also scaled back gender-affirming services. “The shutdown came despite efforts my office took over recent months to assure that they were protected and required to provide gender-affirming care,” Bonta said at the time. Bonta’s office has filed amicus briefs opposing the Trump administration’s attempts to subpoena medical records of gender-affirming care at other hospitals including University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and Children’s Hospital Colorado. Bonta did not intervene in the case settled this week. This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
US Justice Department's voter information lawsuit dismissed by Georgia judgeA federal judge in Georgia is dismissing a U.S. Justice Department lawsuit seeking voter information from the state. The judge says in a Friday ruling that the lawsuit was filed in the wrong city, and should have been filed in Atlanta, not Macon. The government can refile the suit.
Read more »
Judge rules US Justice Department filed a lawsuit over Georgia voter data in the wrong cityA federal judge in Georgia is dismissing a U.S. Justice Department lawsuit seeking voter information from the state.
Read more »
Judge rules US Justice Department filed a lawsuit over Georgia voter data in the wrong cityA federal judge in Georgia is dismissing a U.S. Justice Department lawsuit seeking voter information from the state.
Read more »
Justice Department calls Jack Smith report 'illicit'The Justice Department says in a sharply worded court filing that a report by former special counsel Jack Smith on his investigation into President Donald Trump’s hoarding of classified documents belongs in the “dustbin of history” and should remain sealed. The department’s position echoes that of Trump, whose lawyers this week asked U.S.
Read more »
Justice Department says Jack Smith report on Trump investigation 'belongs in dustbin of history'The Justice Department says in a sharply worded court filing that a report by former special counsel Jack Smith on his investigation into President Donald Trump’s hoarding of classified documents belongs in the “dustbin of history” and should remain sealed.
Read more »
Justice Department says Jack Smith report on Trump investigation 'belongs in dustbin of history'The Justice Department says in a sharply worded court filing that a report by former special counsel Jack Smith on his investigation into President Donald Trump’s hoarding of classified documents belongs in the “dustbin of history” and should remain sealed.
Read more »
