By JAMIE STENGLE
DALLAS (AP) — One of many nation’s first docs accused of illegally offering care to transgender youth beneath GOP-led bans was discovered to haven’t violated the legislation, Texas Lawyer Basic Ken Paxton’s workplace says, almost a yr after the state sued the doctor.
Dr. Hector Granados, a pediatric endocrinologist in El Paso, was known as a “scofflaw” final yr by Paxton’s workplace in a lawsuit that accused him of falsifying medical information and violating a Texas ban that took impact in 2023. Greater than two dozen states have prohibitions on gender-affirming take care of transgender youth, however Texas was the primary to deliver circumstances towards docs, submitting lawsuits towards Granados and two different suppliers.
The circumstances towards the opposite docs, each in Dallas, stay ongoing. However Paxton’s workplace quietly withdrew its lawsuit final week towards Granados, saying in a press release that “no authorized violations had been discovered” following a “evaluation of the proof and Granados’ full medical information.”
Granados, who says Paxton’s workplace by no means reached out earlier than suing him final October, mentioned he wished the state had first let him present he had stopped offering gender-affirming take care of youth earlier than the legislation took impact.
“It was simply out after which we needed to do all the things afterwards,” Granados mentioned in an interview.
The U.S. Supreme Courtroom dominated in June that states can ban gender-affirming medical take care of transgender minors, and at the very least 27 states have adopted legal guidelines limiting or banning the care. Though these accused of violating bans face felony prices in some states, they don’t in Texas, the place the punishments as an alternative expose suppliers to steep fines and revocation of their medical licenses.
Paxton’s workplace mentioned in a press release that Dr. Could Lau and Dr. M. Brett Cooper, the opposite accused physicians, will “face justice for hurting Texas children each bodily and mentally.” Their attorneys didn’t supply remark Wednesday.
“Lawyer Basic Paxton will proceed to deliver the complete pressure of the legislation towards the delusional, left-wing medical professionals responsible of forcing ‘gender’ madness on our youngsters,” Paxton’s workplace mentioned.
Paxton, an in depth ally of President Donald Trump, has sought to place himself as a nationwide chief among the many GOP’s ascendant exhausting proper and is working for the U.S. Senate.
Trump, in his second time period, has launched a broad cost towards transgender rights, transferring to reverse years of authorized and coverage positive aspects for transgender People. Even in states the place the care is allowed beneath state legislation, main hospitals and hospital techniques have mentioned they had been stopping or limiting the care.
Harper Seldin, a workers legal professional for the American Civil Liberties Union’s LGBTQ & HIV Venture, mentioned that even when a lawsuit is dropped, it nonetheless takes “an unlimited toll” on those that must defend themselves.
“I believe this continues to be finest understood as a part of the Texas AG’s marketing campaign to intimidate medical suppliers,” he mentioned.
Granados mentioned he was meticulous in halting gender-affirming take care of youth earlier than Texas’ ban took impact. He mentioned that earlier than the ban, treating transgender youth was simply an extension of his observe that treats youth with diabetes, progress issues and early puberty.
He mentioned that after the ban, he did proceed to prescribe puberty blockers and hormone substitute remedy, however that these remedies weren’t for gender transition. Granados mentioned they had been for youth with endocrine problems, which happen when hormone ranges are too excessive or too low.
Texas’ lawsuit towards Granados known as him a “scofflaw who’s harming the well being and security of Texas youngsters.” It referenced a 2015 information article about transgender care that quoted Granados and medical articles he had written on the subject. Additionally listed within the lawsuit had been particulars on unnamed sufferers, together with their ages and what that they had been prescribed, together with testosterone.
In a courtroom doc filed in Cooper’s case, an legal professional in Paxton’s workplace mentioned that they had subpoenaed supplier experiences for the physician’s testosterone prescriptions from the Texas Prescription Monitoring Program.

Granados’ legal professional, Mark Bracken, mentioned that after coming into into an agreed protecting order with the state, they had been in a position to confidentially produce affected person information to point out Granados had complied with the legislation.
Peter Salib, an assistant professor of legislation on the College of Houston Regulation Middle, mentioned that it’s “uncommon” for a state to drop a case attributable to lack of violations after submitting a lawsuit.
“They’ve lots of alternative to search out out what’s going on earlier than they determine to deliver a lawsuit,” he mentioned.
Granados mentioned he’s grateful to not have the lawsuit on the again of his thoughts.
“It at all times places a toll on you and the way you are feeling,” he mentioned.
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