U.S. challenges Alabama law on
transgender youth
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[April 30, 2022]
By Kanishka Singh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department said it filed a
complaint on Friday challenging a law in Alabama that criminalizes some
gender-affirming treatments for transgender youth.
Earlier this month, Alabama's Republican governor signed into law the
bill, which makes it a felony punishable with up to 10 years of
imprisonment for providing voluntary medical treatments, including
hormone therapy, puberty blockers and surgery to help align physical
characteristics to the gender identity of a minor.
The Justice Department's complaint alleges that the "new law's felony
ban on providing certain medically necessary care to transgender minors
violated the equal protection clause" of the U.S. Constitution's
Fourteenth Amendment.
The department asked the court to issue an immediate order to prevent
the law from going into effect.
Civil rights groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, had
also vowed to challenge the law in court when it was signed.
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"Transgender youth are a part of
Alabama, and they deserve the same privacy, access to treatment, and
data-driven health care from trained medical professionals as any
other Alabamian," Tish Gotell Faulks, legal director, ACLU of
Alabama, said in early April press release.
The Alabama law is among several measures targeting transgender
youth that are advancing in Republican-led states ahead of the
November mid-term congressional elections.
"I believe very strongly that if the good Lord made you a boy, you
are a boy, and if he made you a girl, you are a girl," Governor Kay
Ivey had said when she signed the bill into law. "We should
especially protect our children from these radical, life-altering
drugs and surgeries when they are at such a vulnerable stage in
life."
(This story has been refiled to fix a typo in the last paragraph)
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Leslie Adler
and Aurora Ellis)
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