- by foxnews
- 27 Mar 2025
A federal judge from New Jersey temporarily blocked the Trump administration from separating two transgender service members from the Air Force.
The ruling is the second instance when a federal judge has ruled against the Trump administration as it seeks to implement its ban against transgender people from serving in the military.
Specifically, O'Hearn said Ireland and Bade demonstrated that their separation from service would negatively impact their careers, as well as their reputations.
O'Hearn also said that their "involuntary loss of decorated military status, military healthcare, and the ability to serve their country under a policy they have faithfully abided by for years cannot be repaired by monetary damages."
"The loss of military service under the stigma of a policy that targets gender identity is not merely a loss of employment; it is a profound disruption of personal dignity, medical continuity, and public service," O'Hearn said in the ruling Monday.
"This is the latest example of an activist judge attempting to seize power at the expense of the American people, who overwhelmingly voted to elect President Trump," a Justice Department spokesperson said.
O'Hearn's ruling comes after U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes of Washington, D.C., blocked the Trump administration from implementing its ban on March 19. Reyes said in her opinion that the Trump administration's order was "soaked in animus" and discriminated based on a person's transgender status.
"Indeed, the cruel irony is that thousands of transgender servicemembers have sacrificed - some risking their lives - to ensure for others the very equal protection rights the Military Ban seeks to deny them," Reyes wrote in the decision.
Trump has signed more than 90 executive orders since returning to the White House in January, spurring more than 125 lawsuits against his administration.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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