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訊息

Statement on 11th Circuit Denial of Alabama Families’ Request to Reconsider Ruling That Allowed Transgender Health Ban to Take Effect

The 2023 panel opinion at issue reversed a federal district court opinion granting the plaintiffs a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the law

With four of eleven judges dissenting, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals today issued its decision denying the request of parents and children challenging Alabama’s ban on healthcare for transgender adolescents for the entire court to rehear the case.

 In a sharply divided vote with multiple dissents, a bare majority of the court declined to review the 2023 panel opinion holding that Alabama’s ban neither discriminates against transgender people nor violates the fundamental right of parents to make medical decisions for their children. The 2023 panel opinion reversed a federal district court opinion granting the plaintiffs a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the law.  

In dissent, Judge Rosenbaum wrote:

“[T]he panel opinion is dangerous and wrong. Make no mistake: while the panel opinion continues in force, no modern medical treatment is safe from a state’s misguided decision to outlaw it almost regardless of the state’s reason. Worse still, if a state bans a post-1868 treatment, no patient has legal recourse to provide their child with that necessary, life-saving medical care in this Circuit. And if an individual can’t access a medical treatment because of their sex or transgender status, they are similarly without recourse.”

Also dissenting, Judge Jordan wrote:  

“The panel’s decision necessarily means that the fundamental right of parents to obtain medical treatment for their children extends only to procedures and medications that existed in 1868, and not to modern advances like the polio vaccine (developed in the 1950s), cardiac surgery (first performed in 1983), organ transplants (first successfully completed in 1954), and treatments for cancer like radiation (first used in 1899) and chemotherapy (which started in the 1940s).”

Judges Wilson and Jill Pryor also dissented from the denial of rehearing.

The plaintiffs’ case seeking a permanent injunction blocking the law is still pending before the district court. Earlier this year, the United States Supreme Court agreed to hear a case challenging a similar law from Tennessee, which also bans medical care for transgender adolescents.  That case will be heard later this year, and a decision is expected in 2025.  

Statement from counsel representing the plaintiff parents and youth challenging Alabama’s law:  

“We are disappointed by the decision, but encouraged that nearly half the court dissented from the denial of rehearing. We are also encouraged by the strong dissenting opinions, which are consistent with the view of most judges who have ruled in similar cases across the country. As the dissenting judges point out, the panel’s decision is not only wrong, but dangerous. Families, not the government, should make medical decisions for children. The evidence presented in the case overwhelmingly showed that the banned treatments provide enormous benefits to the adolescents who need them, and that parents are making responsible decisions for their own children. We will continue to challenge this harmful measure and to advocate for these young people and their parents. Laws like this have no place in a free country.”

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) are joined in the litigation by co-counsel King & Spalding LLP and Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

詳細了解 博伊訴馬歇爾案.

訊息

Parents Challenging Alabama Transgender Health Ban Oppose State’s Effort to Bypass Trial

Plaintiffs’ filing refutes false claims about the well-established standards of care for transgender adolescents and highlights how purposeful discrimination against transgender people, not concern about health or safety, was at the root of the criminal ban

Plaintiff families challenging Alabama’s ban on health care for transgender adolescents have asked the court to deny the State’s request to rule on the lawfulness of the ban before a full trial.

The plaintiffs’ filing meticulously refutes false claims made in the State’s motion for summary judgment about the established standards of medical care for transgender adolescents. The plaintiffs’ brief cites expert evidence about the rigorous development of those standards, the careful assessment and multidisciplinary approach involved in the delivery of care to transgender adolescents in Alabama, and the well-established benefits of care for transgender adolescents suffering from gender dysphoria.

The families challenging the ban argue that rather than short-circuit the process as the State requests, the case must be allowed to proceed to trial to ensure full consideration of the factual record on the safety and efficacy of transgender health care, the harm suffered by transgender adolescents when they are denied necessary care, and the purposeful discrimination against transgender people that motivated the sweeping ban.

詳細了解 博伊訴馬歇爾案

訊息

格拉德回應阿拉巴馬州最高法院前所未有的裁決,該裁決損害了家庭建設醫療保健的可及性 

今天,GLBTQ 法律倡導者和捍衛者 (GLAD) 發表了以下聲明 Polly Crozier,同性戀者反歧視聯盟家庭宣傳主任阿拉巴馬州最高法院的裁決 LePage 訴生殖醫學中心。 

生育醫療保健使許多美國人能夠生育孩子並建立家庭。生兒育女關乎愛、希望以及對下一代的養育。  

「這就是為什麼阿拉巴馬州最高法院的判決 LePage訴生殖醫學中心 令人震驚和悲傷。該法案旨在阻止人們透過安全、有效且常見的醫療手段——體外受精——來生育孩子,而許多人都依賴這種手段。阿拉巴馬州法院在一項前所未有的裁決中認定,由滿懷希望的父母在醫療服務提供者的幫助下為建立家庭而創造的冷凍胚胎,在法律上屬於兒童。這對想要生育孩子的人來說,帶來了難以言喻的、毀滅性的、令人心碎的後果。不孕不育的旅程在情感上、身體上和經濟上都令人感到壓力重重,這項裁決可能會奪走許多人擁有家庭的機會。阿拉巴馬州至少有三家診所因擔心違反裁決而暫停了試管受精。 

這一案件是更廣泛的努力的另一個可怕結果,這項努力不僅是為了控製女性,也是為了規定所有美國人應該如何實現我們生活中最私密的部分,包括何時以及如何組建家庭。  

「那些想要讓我們倒退的人正在加班加點地推進極端主義議程:徹底禁止墮胎、將生育保健和跨性別者保健定為犯罪、扭轉婚姻平等、針對 LGBTQ+ 父母和年輕人,並將政府插入我們最個人和家庭的決定中——這對我們所有人來說都是可怕的影響。 

我們還必須加班加點、齊心協力、刻不容緩地捍衛我們共同的價值觀——自由和家庭自主。同性戀者聯盟(GLAD)始終堅定地致力於與各運動合作,繼續為這些共同的價值觀而奮鬥。我們將繼續努力,擴大家庭建設醫療保健的可及性——正如我們在緬因州所做的那樣,目前我們正與康涅狄格州、馬薩諸塞州、新罕布什爾州、羅德島州、佛蒙特州以及聯邦政府的合作夥伴攜手合作——並通過以下至關重要的保護措施來保護通過輔助生殖和代孕出生的兒童: 馬薩諸塞州親子法.”

訊息

11th Circuit Order Allows Alabama Transgender Adolescent Medical Ban to Take Effect

Today the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order allowing Alabama’s ban on medical care for transgender adolescents to take effect. This order grants a request by the state of Alabama to stay the trial court’s 2022 decision blocking the law from being enforced while the challenge against it proceeds.

Lawyers representing parents of transgender adolescents who are challenging the ban issued the following statement:

“Alabama’s transgender healthcare ban will harm thousands of transgender adolescents across the state and will put parents in the excruciating position of not being able to get the medical care their children need to thrive. The district court issued its preliminary order blocking the ban after hearing days of testimony from parents, doctors, and medical experts about the devastating impact of this ban and the lack of any medical justification for it. Today’s ruling will hurt parents and children in the state. We will continue to challenge this unlawful ban and to support parents and their kids in pushing back against the dangerous reality of being denied access to necessary, best practice medical care.”

On August 21, a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit reversed the district court’s May, 2022 decision preventing the ban from taking effect. In a request for rehearing filed in September 2023, the plaintiffs argued the full court should review the panel decision because it conflicts with Supreme Court and 11th Circuit precedent dictating that all laws discriminating based on sex should be subjected to heightened scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause, and because the ban violates parents’ longstanding right to make medical decisions for their children, rather than cede that power to the state. That request for rehearing en banc is still pending. A full trial on the constitutionality of the ban is planned to take place in federal district court in August 2024.

原告 博伊訴馬歇爾案 are represented by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC). They are joined in the litigation by co-counsel King & Spalding LLP and Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

Alabama families looking for support can reach out to www.southernequality.org/ALresources

訊息

Alabama Parents Ask Full 11th Circuit to Review Panel Decision that Allows the State to Ban Needed Medical Care for their Children

The panel decision reversing the block on Alabama’s criminal transgender healthcare ban undermines parents’ bedrock right to provide their children with established medical care and conflicts with clear precedent that laws targeting transgender people discriminate based on sex

Alabama families challenging the state’s ban on medical care for their transgender children have asked the full 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to review a panel ruling saying the ban can take effect while their case continues.

The Alabama ban has been blocked since May of 2022 by a preliminary injunction issued by a federal district court following a multi-day evidentiary hearing in which the court heard testimony from parents, health care providers, and medical experts. After considering the evidence, the district court found that the provision of these medical treatments is established care and that being denied these treatments would cause transgender adolescents to suffer serious harm. The district court opinion held that in targeting transgender youth Alabama’s law likely violates the federal Equal Protection Clause and also violates parents’ fundamental right to make medical decisions for their children.

On August 21, a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit reversed the district court’s decision. In their request for rehearing, the plaintiffs argue the full court should review the panel decision because it conflicts with Supreme Court and 11th Circuit precedent dictating that all laws discriminating based on sex should be subjected to heightened scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause, and because the ban violates parents’ longstanding right to make medical decisions for their children, rather than cede that power to the state. 

The Alabama families challenging the law are represented by GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, the National Center for Lesbian Rights, The Southern Poverty Law Center, and Human Rights Campaign.

Jennifer Levi, Senior Director of Transgender and Queer Rights at GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders said:
“As the district court concluded after hearing days of testimony from parents, doctors, and medical experts, enforcement of Alabama’s criminal transgender healthcare ban will harm thousands of transgender adolescents across Alabama. It will also put Alabama parents in the excruciating position of not being able to get the medical care their children need to thrive. We will support these parents and their kids in pushing back against that dangerous reality on every level.”   

Shannon Minter, Legal Director at the National Center for Lesbian Rights said:
“Our clients and other Alabama families have a right to protect their transgender children and ensure they get the support they need. The panel’s decision tramples on that right and conflicts with clearly established Supreme Court and 11th Circuit law. We hope the full court will review this case and prevent this devastating criminal ban from taking effect.” 

Scott McCoy, Deputy Legal Director for LGBTQ Rights and Special Litigation at Southern Poverty Law Center said:
“Allowing SB 184 to take effect would serve no purpose other than preventing parents from obtaining the medical care their children need. Every federal district court that has heard the evidence presented has come to the same conclusion: the established medical treatments recommended for transgender adolescents are safe, effective, and lifesaving for some youth, and there is no legitimate reason to ban them.”

Sarah Warbelow, Legal Director at Human Rights Campaign said:
“Parents, not the government, are best situated to make medical decisions for their children. That understanding is deeply rooted in our common understanding and our legal foundations. Allowing this ban to take effect would be a shocking reversal of firmly established precedent and a jarring intrusion into private family decisions.” 

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) are joined in the litigation by co-counsel King & Spalding LLP and Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

了解更多案件信息.

訊息

Update on the federal challenge to Alabama’s law banning medical care for transgender minors and access to care:

The most important thing to know is that the preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of Alabama’s law is still in effect and will remain in effect at least for the next two to three months, and possibly longer.

As you likely are aware, on August 21, 2023, a three-judge panel of the Eleventh Circuit issued a decision disagreeing with a ruling by a federal district court judge in Alabama blocking enforcement of Alabama’s criminal ban on the prescription or administration of puberty blockers or hormone therapy for transgender adolescents.  

Judge Burke issued his preliminary injunction last May, blocking any enforcement of Alabama’s law since that time.

The most important thing to know is that the preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of Alabama’s law is still in effect and will remain in effect at least for the next two to three months, and possibly longer.

Based on the ordinary legal process, an appellate decision reversing a preliminary injunction by a federal district court judge does not take effect immediately. The federal rules of civil procedure require that the plaintiffs be given 21 days to ask the entire court to review the decision (this is known as seeking rehearing en banc). The legal team representing the plaintiffs in Alabama intends to do so.  

Our petition for rehearing en banc must be filed by September 11. The preliminary injunction must remain in place until the Eleventh Circuit either denies that request or, if they accept the request and agree to review the panel decision, until they issue a decision.

While this process unfolds, the preliminary injunction remains in effect, which means the Alabama ban cannot be enforced. Medical providers in Alabama are continuing to provide care to transgender adolescents and will continue to provide care as long as the preliminary injunction is in effect.    

That said, depending on how the Eleventh Circuit rules, there may come a point at which the preliminary injunction is no longer in effect, so parents of transgender adolescents in Alabama should be prepared for that possibility as one they may have to face down the road. If that were to happen, the law does not bar parents from taking their children out of state to seek care, from getting prescriptions filled in Alabama, or from administering medications to their children. The law in Alabama applies only to doctors and other healthcare providers.

Please stay tuned for more updates, and feel free to reach out with any questions to any of our legal team organizations:

GLBTQ 法律倡議者與捍衛者
Legal Help Line: www.GLADAnswers.org
Contact
: Amanda Johnston, ajohnston@glad.org

全國女同性戀權利中心
Legal Help Line: www.nclrights.org/get-help
Contact
: Shannon Minter, sminter@nclrights.org

人權運動
Legal Help Line: www.thehrcfoundation.org/impact-litigation-and-advocacy
Contact: Aryn Fields, aryn.fields@hrc.org

Southern Poverty Law Center
Contact: Kimberly Allen, kimberly.allen@splcenter.org

For direct help navigating care in Alabama, including 1-on-1 conversations about your family’s situation and emergency funding, contact the Southern Transgender Youth Emergency Project, a project of the Campaign for Southern Equality, led in Alabama in partnership with the Magic City Acceptance Center and Prism United. 

訊息

Statement on 11th Circuit Ruling Reversing Injunction on Alabama Transgender Healthcare Ban

Today, a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a decision reversing a federal district court ruling blocking enforcement of Alabama’s law banning medical care for transgender adolescents. The district court opinion, which was issued last spring, held that Alabama’s law likely violated the federal Equal Protection Clause and parents’ fundamental right to make medical decisions for their children. Thus far, every single federal district court to hear a similar challenge has ruled similarly, holding that these state bans discriminate against transgender minors and burden their parents’ constitutionally protected rights. The 11th Circuit panel disagreed, holding that Alabama’s law does not discriminate based on sex or transgender status and is therefore subject only to the lowest level of constitutional review.  

The Alabama families challenging the law in 博伊訴馬歇爾案 are represented by the National Center for Lesbian Rights, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, The Southern Poverty Law Center, and Human Rights Campaign, who issued the following statement:

“This is a deeply disappointing decision that is difficult to reconcile with the 11th Circuit’s prior rulings and with the Supreme Court’s clear guidance that discrimination because a person is transgender is sex discrimination. Our clients are devastated by this decision, which leaves them vulnerable to what the district court—after hearing several days of testimony from parents, doctors, and experts–found to be irreparable harm as a result of losing the medical care they have been receiving and that has enabled them to thrive. 

While this is a setback, we are confident that it is only a temporary one. Every federal district court that has heard the evidence presented in these cases has come to the same conclusion: these medical treatments are safe, effective, and lifesaving for some youth, and there is no legitimate reason to ban them. We believe that at the end of the day, our nation’s courts will protect these vulnerable youth and block these harmful laws, which serve no purpose other than to prevent parents from obtaining the medical care their children need. Parents, not the government, are best situated to make these medical decisions for their children. These laws are a shocking example of government overreach and a jarring intrusion into private family decisions. This case is far from over, and we will continue to aggressively seek legal protection for these families.”   

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) are joined in the litigation by co-counsel King & Spalding LLP and Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC.

了解更多案件信息.

訊息

Plaintiffs urge the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals not to reinstate a law that would criminalize doctors and parents for ensuring their transgender children can access necessary medical care to support their well-being

MONTGOMERY – Plaintiffs challenging Alabama’s SB 184 today will urge the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to affirm the district court’s order barring enforcement of the law, which would criminalize doctors and parents for providing transgender children with access to necessary medical care. The law was blocked by a federal district court judge in May 2022 after a two-day evidentiary hearing.

Arguments on Alabama’s appeal of the district court’s ruling will begin at approximately 9:30 a.m. CT on Friday, November 18 at the Frank M. Johnson Jr. U.S. Courthouse in Montgomery. The argument will be live-streamed. More information is available on the court website.

SB 184 criminalizes parents who seek essential medical care for their transgender children, the doctors who provide this medical care, and anyone else who assists transgender young people to get the care they need. Under the law, which is unprecedented, parents, doctors and others could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $15,000.

The district court blocked enforcement of SB 184 after an extensive evidentiary hearing in May 2022, finding that the law seeks to ban established, effective medical care and that doing so would cause severe harm. The district court found that the State of Alabama presented no credible evidence to contradict testimony from doctors and medical experts on the safety and efficacy of medical care for transgender youth who experience gender dysphoria, including the fact that over 22 major medical organizations recognize the established standard of care for transgender youth.

這套西裝, Reverend Eknes-Tucker v. Marshall, is brought by five parents on the grounds that it strips them of the right to make important decisions about their children’s healthcare. In its order blocking the law from taking effect, the district court agreed that plaintiffs are likely to prevail in their claim that SB 184 unconstitutionally discriminates against transgender minors and violates the fundamental right of parents, rather than the state, to make healthcare decisions for their children.

Plaintiff Megan Poe, mother of 15-year-old Allison of Northern Alabama (both proceeding anonymously):

“Like any parent, I want to provide my children with the support they need. Ensuring that my daughter has access to the medical care she needs has meant that she can be a confident teenager who is happy and optimistic about her future. I hope the court of appeals will see that parents of transgender children simply want our children to be healthy, happy and safe.”

The parent plaintiffs are joined by a private practice pediatrician in rural Southeast Alabama and a clinical psychologist in Birmingham. The U.S. Department of Justice has also joined the suit as plaintiff-intervenor challenging the constitutionality of the law, which would deny established medical treatments to youth who are transgender but not to others.

Additional Alabama parents of transgender children filed a friend-of-the-court brief asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to uphold the injunction against SB 184. 

In their brief, parents describe the importance of being able to seek the best medical advice and care to support their children’s well-being, and how they have seen their children flourish with access to the right care:

Laura and Brian Coe, parents of 15-year-old Matthew (proceeding anonymously)

As much as Matthew has benefitted simply from being accepted and affirmed by his family, school, doctors, and friends, his medical transition is a critical measure for his well-being…Since obtaining the medical care that he needs, Laura and Brian have seen Matthew begin to “come to life.” The Coes would “worry for Matthew’s safety” if there were a disruption to his care. They are “simply trying to support their child and provide him with the best care possible.”

Melissa Soe, parent of 15-year-old Taylor (proceeding anonymously)

Since coming out and receiving care, Taylor has gone from “an anxious, sad kid who had a hard time getting up in the morning, to a kid who is up and out on their bike, in the woods, and going to camp.” Taylor is finally beginning to remind their parents of the happy-go-lucky kid they were when they were younger, prior to puberty taking its toll…” [It is] very important to Taylor to have continuity of care,” which would be disrupted by implementation of [SB 184]. Simply knowing that such care is accessible has significantly decreased Taylor’s distress.

Cynthia Lamar-Hart, parent of Gwendolyn who began receiving transition-related care while an adolescent living in Alabama and is now in her late 20s. Because access to care was not available in Alabama at the time, the family had to travel out-of-state:

[E]ven with the means to afford and make time for out-of-state treatment, Cynthia witnessed how …  months of delays in Gwendolyn’s care resulted in suffering that she would not have experienced had she been able to visit a clinic in-state. Cynthia quickly saw a change in Gwendolyn after she began receiving transition-related care. Once Gwendolyn began the process of transitioning, she was no longer withdrawn, and became more confident and engaged socially and at school.

Joining these parents in asking the 11th Circuit to continue blocking enforcement of SB 184 are:

Visit the case page to find all friend-of-the-court briefs filed in support of plaintiffs-appellees and other case documents. 

The plaintiffs-appellees are represented by Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC, King & Spalding LLP, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC).

訊息

Parents, Medical Experts, Faith Groups, and 21 States Urge Appeals Court Not to Reinstate Alabama Law Criminalizing Healthcare for Transgender Youth

Multiple friend-of-the-court briefs filed with the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in support of Plaintiffs-Appellees in 埃克內斯-塔克牧師訴馬歇爾案

ALABAMA – Parents of transgender children have filed a 法庭之友陳述 asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to uphold the injunction against S.B. 184. The Alabama law, blocked by a federal judge in May 2022, would criminalize doctors and parents for ensuring their transgender children can access necessary medical care. Medical experts, faith groups, and 21 U.S. states also filed briefs urging the Appeals Court to keep the bar on S.B. 184 in place.

The Alabama parents of transgender children described in their brief the importance of being able to seek the best medical advice and care to support their children’s well-being, and how they have seen their children flourish with access to the right care.

Excerpts from the Parents’ brief:

When their children came out to them as transgender, each one of these parents was surprised, scared, and confused. Their very first step was to make sure their child knew that they would never stop loving and supporting them, and then they set out to determine what they needed to do to protect and ensure their child’s health and safety. This included seeking professional medical assistance to determine whether their child was, in fact, suffering from gender dysphoria and, if so, to devise a treatment plan.

Laura and Brian Coe, parents of 15-year-old Matthew (proceeding anonymously)

As much as Matthew has benefitted simply from being accepted and affirmed by his family, school, doctors, and friends, his medical transition is a critical measure for his well-being…Since obtaining the medical care that he needs, Laura and Brian have seen Matthew begin to “come to life.” The Coes would “worry for Matthew’s safety” if there were a disruption to his care. They are “simply trying to support their child and provide him with the best care possible.”

Melissa Soe, parent of 15-year-old Taylor (proceeding anonymously)

Since coming out and receiving care, Taylor has gone from “an anxious, sad kid who had a hard time getting up in the morning, to a kid who is up and out on their bike, in the woods, and going to camp.” Taylor is finally beginning to remind their parents of the happy-go-lucky kid they were when they were younger, prior to puberty taking its toll…” [It is] very important to Taylor to have continuity of care,” which would be disrupted by implementation of [SB 184]. Simply knowing that such care is accessible has significantly decreased Taylor’s distress.

Cynthia Lamar-Hart, parent of Gwendolyn who began receiving transition-related care while an adolescent living in Alabama and is now in her late 20s

Because access to care was not available in Alabama at the time, the family had to travel out-of-state:

[E]ven with the means to afford and make time for out-of-state treatment, Cynthia witnessed how …  months of delays in Gwendolyn’s care resulted in suffering that she would not have experienced had she been able to visit a clinic in-state. Cynthia quickly saw a change in Gwendolyn after she began receiving transition-related care. Once Gwendolyn began the process of transitioning, she was no longer withdrawn, and became more confident and engaged socially and at school.

Joining these parents in asking the Court of Appeals to continue blocking enforcement of S.B. 184 are:

All friend-of-the-court briefs filed in support of plaintiffs-appellees and other case documents can be found on the case page. Oral argument is scheduled for the week of November 14, 2022 at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Montgomery, Alabama.

The plaintiffs-appellees are represented by Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC, King & Spalding LLP, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), SPLC Action Fund (SPLC), and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC).

了解更多案件信息

訊息

挑戰阿拉巴馬州 SB 184 法案的家長 響應國家呼籲 2022年5月,地方法院的裁決阻止了該法律的執行。 SB 184法案將為跨性別子女尋求基本醫療服務的父母、提供此類醫療服務的醫生以及任何幫助跨性別年輕人獲得所需護理的其他人定為犯罪。根據該法案,父母、醫生和其他人可能面臨最高10年的監禁和最高15,000美元的罰款。阿拉巴馬州已就地方法院5月13日阻止該法律執行的命令向美國第11巡迴上訴法院提起上訴。

原告在昨晚提交的訴狀中敦促上訴法院維持針對SB 184的禁令,理由是地方法院依據的是行之有效的循證醫學標準以及父母為子女獲得醫療服務的基本權利。在5月份地方法院的聽證會以及相關文件中,家長們作證稱,能夠獲得所需的醫療服務對他們子女的健康產生了巨大的積極影響,而被迫停止治療將對他們子女的健康造成毀滅性的後果。

地方法院阻止了SB 184法案的執行,理由是大量證據表明該法案試圖禁止現有有效的醫療服務,且此舉將造成嚴重損害。法院在命令中表示,原告的訴求很可能勝訴,他們認為SB 184法案違憲歧視跨性別未成年人,侵犯了父母(而非州政府)為其子女做出醫療保健決定的基本權利。

在阻止該法律的通過時,地方法院指出,阿拉巴馬州沒有提供任何證據來反駁醫生和醫學專家關於治療患有性別焦慮症的跨性別青年的醫療護理的安全性和有效性的證詞,包括以下事實: 超過 22 家大型醫療機構 承認對跨性別青年的既定護理過程。

這套西裝, 埃克內斯-塔克牧師訴馬歇爾案五位家長提起訴訟,理由是該法案剝奪了他們對子女醫療保健做出重要決定的權利。參與訴訟的還有阿拉巴馬州東南部農村地區的一位私人執業兒科醫生、阿拉巴馬大學伯明翰分校醫療系統的一位臨床心理學家,以及伯明翰朝聖者聯合基督教會的資深牧師保羅·埃克內斯-塔克牧師。如果該法案生效,他們都可能面臨嚴厲的刑事處罰。美國司法部也加入了訴訟。 作為原告介入者 質疑該法律的合憲性,該法律拒絕為跨性別青年提供既定的醫療治療,但允許為其他青年提供治療。

原告梅根坡(Megan Poe),阿拉巴馬州北部 15 歲女孩艾莉森(Allison)的母親:

雖然很多人可能不理解擁有跨性別孩子意味著什麼,但我知道任何父母都會有同樣的擔憂,擔心孩子是否健康安全。阻止SB 184生效讓我的家人鬆了一口氣,因為我的女兒繼續得到了她需要的支持和照顧。這項法律將我們家庭的個人醫療保健決定置於我們並非主動要求的關注之下,但我很高興地方法院聽取並了解我們以及其他類似家庭的經驗。我的女兒如今是一個自信、投入、快樂的青少年,因為我們能夠照顧她。我希望上訴法院也能看到這一點,並維持針對SB 184的禁令,直到我們希望它徹底停止為止。

自 2015 年起擔任歷史悠久的朝聖者教堂聯合基督教會 (UCC) 主任牧師的保羅·埃克內斯-塔克 (Paul Eknes-Tucker) 牧師表示:

在我服事的教會中,跨性別兒童的父母們正在尋求所有父母都渴望的——找到確保孩子快樂健康的最佳途徑。我曾與憂心忡忡的父母們坐在一起,親眼目睹他們如何透過尋求合適的支持和個性化的照顧來解答他們的疑問,並讓他們的跨性別孩子茁壯成長。允許SB 184法案生效將剝奪阿拉巴馬州家庭獲得支持的選擇,並將阿拉巴馬州的孩子們置於危險之中。

阿拉巴馬州東南部農村私人診所兒科醫生 Rachel Koe 博士:

“地方法院裁定阻止SB 184法案的通過,讓我執業的跨性別兒童家長們如釋重負,他們和所有家長一樣,都希望為孩子提供最好的一切。讓家庭再次經歷這種恐懼將是難以置信的殘忍,而讓家長面臨入獄的風險或停止幫助孩子茁壯成長的治療,更是毀滅性的打擊。”

挑戰 SB 184 的家庭來自全州各地,由於刑事起訴的風險以及為了保護他們的隱私和安全,他們選擇匿名起訴。

原告的代表律師包括 Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC、King & Spalding LLP、GLBTQ 法律倡導者和捍衛者 (GLAD)、國家女同性戀權利中心 (NCLR)、SPLC 行動基金 (SPLC) 和人權運動 (HRC)。

GLAD 跨性別者權利計畫主任 Jennifer Levi:

地方法院承認,父母,而不是政府,應該就子女的健康和福祉做出最佳決定。父母希望為孩子提供最好的。正因如此,維護父母為子女做出醫療保健決定的權利一直是美國長期以來秉持的價值觀。

NCLR 資深律師兼跨性別青年計畫主任 Asaf Orr:

正如地方法院所言,政府不能僅僅因為跨性別青少年的身份而剝奪他們獲得基本醫療服務的權利。否則,各州將有權頒布歧視性法律,損害年輕人的利益,並侵犯他們的家庭生活。

HRC 法律總監 Sarah Warbelow:

「絕對重要的是,父母必須繼續擁有自主權,為子女做出這些至關重要、關乎生命的決定,而不是州議員的決定。這項違反憲法、有害的法律剝奪了父母為子女的最大利益行事的能力,因此必須繼續執行這項禁令。”

南方貧困法律中心行動基金臨時副法律總監 Scott McCoy,LGBTQ 權利與特別訴訟:

維持針對這項構思不周的法律的禁令,對於依賴這項維護生命和拯救生命的醫療服務的兒童和家庭至關重要。我們希望上訴法院能夠認可地方法院的裁決,即這項法律違憲,並危及跨性別兒童的健康和福祉。

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