For Immediate Release
May 21, 2025
BOISE — Attorney General Raúl Labrador led a 26-state coalition, along with Indiana, in filing an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit supporting the federal government’s appeal in Doe v. Bondi. The appeal challenges a lower court’s preliminary injunction against a Trump Administration policy that protects the dignity, safety, and privacy of female inmates by requiring federal prison housing assignments based on biological sex. The policy also prohibits the use of taxpayer funds for sex-change procedures in federal prisons.
“Truth matters—and it’s under attack in our culture today,” said Attorney General Labrador. “We’re standing up for biological reality, lawful executive authority, and the dignity and safety of women. If government policy or court rulings deny basic truth, it threatens both public trust and the rights of individuals.”
In January 2025, President Trump signed Executive Order 14168, Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government. Among its provisions, the Order directed the Bureau of Prisons to house inmates according to their biological sex. It also prohibited federal funding for sex reassignment surgeries and related procedures in prisons and immigration detention centers.
Shortly after the policy was issued, a lawsuit was filed in federal court seeking to block the housing provisions and the restriction on taxpayer-funded procedures. The plaintiffs aim to compel federal prison officials to place biologically male inmates in female correctional facilities and to provide sex-change operations at public expense.
In response, Idaho is leading a multistate amicus brief urging the D.C. Circuit to defer to the Executive Order that directs federal prisons to house inmates according to their biological sex and bars federal funding for sex-change drugs and surgeries. The States argue that prison officials must be free to manage housing and medical decisions because they alone have the expertise to balance competing safety, privacy, and medical risks in a dangerous prison environment, and because placing biological males in women’s units jeopardizes female inmates’ privacy, safety, and dignity.
The case, Doe v. Bondi, is currently pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Idaho’s brief supports the federal government’s appeal and the Administration’s authority to enforce policies that prioritize safety and biological reality in federal custody.
Read the amicus brief here.
More from the Daily Wire here.

About Raúl Labrador
Raúl Labrador is the 33rd Attorney General of Idaho. The Office of the Attorney General provides legal representation for the State of Idaho. This representation is furnished to state agencies, offices and boards in the furtherance of the state's legal interests. The office is part of state government’s executive branch and its duties are laid out in the Idaho Constitution.