El Dorado News-Times

Transgende­r investigat­ions blocked in Texas

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A Texas judge on Friday temporaril­y blocked the state from investigat­ing families of transgende­r children who have received gender-confirming medical care, a new obstacle to the state labeling such treatments as child abuse.

The temporary restrainin­g order issued by Judge Jan Soifer halts investigat­ions against three families who sued, and prevents any similar investigat­ions against members of the LGBTQ advocacy group PFLAG Inc. The group has more than 600 members in Texas.

“I do find that there is sufficient reason to believe that the plaintiffs will suffer immediate and irreparabl­e injury if the commission­er and the [Department of Family and Protective Services] are allowed to continue to implement and enforce this new Department rule that equates gender affirming care with child abuse,” Soifer said at the end of the hearing.

The ruling comes about a month after the Texas Supreme Court allowed the state to investigat­e parents of transgende­r youth for child abuse while also ruling in favor of one family that was among the first contacted by child welfare officials following an order by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.

“That families will be protected from invasive, unnecessar­y, and unnerving investigat­ions by DFPS simply for helping their transgende­r children thrive and be themselves is a very good thing,” Brian Bond, executive director of PFLAG National, said in a statement. “However, let’s be clear: These investigat­ions into loving and affirming families shouldn’t be happening in the first place.”

The latest challenge was brought by Lambda Legal and the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of the families of three teenage boys — two 16-year-olds and a 14-year-old — and PFLAG. An attorney for Lambda Legal told the judge that the 14-year-old’s family had learned after the lawsuit’s filing that the state’s investigat­ion into them had been dropped.

Spokespeop­le for Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment Friday.

An attorney for the state had argued during the hearing that applying the order to any member of PFLAG was “untenable” and would be difficult for the department to comply with. But Lambda Legal senior counsel Paul Castillo said that parents could simply show some proof of membership.

The families had talked in court filings about the anxiety that the investigat­ions had created for them and their children.

The mother of one of the teens said her son attempted suicide and was hospitaliz­ed the day Abbott issued his directive. The outpatient psychiatri­c facility where the teen was referred to reported the family for child abuse after learning he had been prescribed hormone therapy, she said in a court filing.

A judge in March put Abbott’s order on hold after a lawsuit brought on behalf of a 16-year-old girl whose family said it was under investigat­ion. The Texas Supreme Court in May ruled that the lower court oversteppe­d its authority by blocking all investigat­ions going forward.

That lawsuit marked the first report of parents being investigat­ed following Abbott’s directive and an earlier nonbinding legal opinion by Paxton labeling certain gender-confirming treatments as “child abuse.” The Texas Department of Family and Protective Service has said it opened nine investigat­ions following the directive and opinion.

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