• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Digital News Updates
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business

Montana  Joins Coalition in Appeal to Block Taxpayer-Funded Sex-Change Surgery for Convicted Murderer

February 2, 2025

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen has joined a coalition of 24 state attorneys general in filing an amicus brief with the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, urging the court to reverse a lower court’s decision allowing a convicted murderer in Indiana to receive taxpayer-funded sex-change surgery.

The brief challenges a district court ruling that granted Autumn Cordellioné, who is serving a 55-year prison sentence for the strangulation of an 11-month-old, the right to undergo sex reassignment surgery. The coalition argues that the procedure is not covered under the Eighth Amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishments, and that there is no medical consensus supporting the surgery as a necessary or effective treatment for gender dysphoria.

In the brief, the attorneys general contend that federal courts should be cautious in overriding state officials’ decisions regarding inmate medical care. The brief states that, under the Eighth Amendment, an inmate can only claim deliberate indifference to their medical needs if the treatment they receive is “blatantly inappropriate,” noting that the medical community is still debating the best way to treat gender dysphoria.

“Federal courts should be especially reticent to second-guess state officials’ decisions regarding the medical care inmates receive, given that the medical community is still debating the treatment of gender dysphoria,” the brief reads.

The coalition also argues that the district court’s decision to grant Cordellioné a preliminary injunction was a mistake, as it granted permanent relief by approving an irreversible procedure. The court’s reliance on incomplete evidence from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s (WPATH) Standards of Care is also criticized.

The attorneys general assert that WPATH’s standards are politically motivated and influenced by the Biden administration, lacking sufficient evidence to justify the surgery. They also argue that the Indiana Department of Correction Commissioner was not given enough time to conduct discovery to examine the credibility of these standards.

“The WPATH Standards are not ‘credible and reliable’, and should not be relied on to constitutionalize a standard of care under the Eighth Amendment,” the brief concludes.

The amicus brief is led by Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall and supported by attorneys general from 24 states, including Montana, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming.

The coalition’s filing continues the ongoing legal battle over the rights of incarcerated individuals and the use of taxpayer funds for medical procedures. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals is expected to hear the case in the coming months.

By: DNU staff

Filed Under: Featured, Politics

Related Articles:

  • Gianforte Honors Winners of 2025 Youth Hunting Story Contest at Capitol
  • US Supreme Court Sides With Knudsen 9-0
  • Wyoming pro-life laws struck down by state Supreme Court
  • GOP senators introduce bill to increase penalties for assaulting ICE officers
  • Sheehy Secures $12.2 Million for Montana Projects in Senate Funding Bill
  • Justice McKinnon Pleads Not Guilty to Misdemeanor Reckless Endangerment Charge

Primary Sidebar

— Advertisement —

Digital News Updates Logo

Recent News Posts

  • Grand Forks AFB selected to lead Point Defense Battle Lab
  • Medical Genetics Center: Empowering Patients One Test at a Time
  • Education dept. launches 18 Title IX probes as Supreme Court hears cases
  • Medal of Honor Monday: Army Lt. Col. Harold Fritz

Recent Politics Posts

  • GOP senators introduce bill to increase penalties for assaulting ICE officers
  • Wyoming pro-life laws struck down by state Supreme Court
  • Daines Urges Expanded Trade Access for Montana Pulse Crops in India
  • Sheehy Secures $12.2 Million for Montana Projects in Senate Funding Bill

Recent Business Posts

  • Mitsubishi buys Louisiana, Texas shale gas assets for $7.5B
  • Montana State University Extension to host winter ag series in southeastern Montana Jan. 19-23
  • JP Morgan Lifts NorthWestern Energy Price Target to $61 Amid Black Hills Merger Plans
  • Berkshire Hathaway Completes $9.7 Billion Acquisition of OxyChem

Copyright © 2026 Digital News Updates, All Rights Reserved.