A federal judge in Manhattan has halted the Justice Department’s efforts to obtain sensitive medical information about transgender youth receiving transition-related care at New York City hospitals. The department had targeted NYU Langone, a prominent Manhattan medical system, demanding identifying information and medical records of adolescents who accessed transition care.
The Trump administration aimed to terminate gender transition treatments for young individuals, labeling them as harmful to impressionable children. For over a year, investigations focused on hospitals and providers offering gender transition services to youth. This latest ruling presents a major impediment to these probes.
In her decision, Judge Katherine Polk Failla of the Federal District Court expressed concern about the extensive nature of the grand jury subpoena issued to NYU Langone. The subpoena sought six years’ worth of data on adolescent patients who received transition care.
“Those patients sought gender-affirming treatments under a reasonable assumption of absolute privacy,” Judge Failla noted.
She questioned the necessity of the information. “I cannot conceive of a crime that would require such broad disclosure,” she said, emphasizing the government’s interests do not outweigh the patients’ privacy rights.
The judge warned of severe repercussions without intervention. “If not enjoined, the subpoena would allow the government to disclose intimate details of plaintiffs’ medical histories and personal lives, specifically their transgender status,” Judge Failla stated.

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