“This Verdict Perpetuates Political Violence in Missouri”
ST. LOUIS (Nov. 25, 2024) — Earlier today, Circuit Judge Craig Carter upheld SB 49, an anti-trans law that blocks transgender youth, low-income adults, and those incarcerated in Missouri from accessing evidence-based, medically-necessary healthcare. The case, Noe, et al. v. Parson, et al., was filed in July 2023, on behalf of three families of transgender young people, medical providers, and the organizations PFLAG National and GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing LGBTQ+ Equality.
PROMO, Missouri’s LGBTQ+ public policy and advocacy organization, released the following statement from Shira Berkowitz (they/them), Sr. Director of Public Policy and Advocacy.
“Judge Craig Carter showed flagrant and shameless ignorance today to the impact this law has on transgender and nonbinary communities,” said Shira Berkowitz (they/them), Sr. Director of Public Policy and Advocacy for PROMO. “With his decision, he took the right of a person’s bodily autonomy and gave it to the Missouri Legislature. He took the ability for families to decide what medical decision is right for them and gave it to politicians with agendas and no medical credentials. This verdict perpetuates political violence in Missouri, a pattern which was started by the legislature, carried on by Governor Parson, and now by Judge Craig Carter — each and every one of them has blood on their hands.”
Media can see a joint statement by Lambda Legal and the ACLU of Missouri here: https://lambdalegal.org/newsroom/noe_mo_20241125_court-upholds-missouri-ban-on-essential-health-care-for-transgender-missourians/