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A federal judge ordered the Department of Health and Human Services to provide the immigration officers access to the personal data of the Medicade Enrollis, including their home addresses.
District Judge Vins Sixbriya, who appointed an Obama, was given an initial prohibition, in which the Homeland Security Department was blocked by using the medicine received from 20 states, which filed a lawsuit to prevent data sharing.
The order, assigned on Tuesday, prevents HHS from sharing data on medicid enroll in these states, which is accompanied by immigration and customs enforcement with the aim of targeting migrants for exile.
“Using CMS data for immigration enforcement has threatened to disrupt the operation of medicid – a program that the Congress has deemed important for the provision of health coverage to the country’s weakest,” Chhabriya wrote.
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A judge ordered HHS to provide access to individual data of medicid enrollis to immigration officers. (Kayla Bartakowski/Getty Images)
The judge wrote that there is nothing “clearly illegal” about DHS about collecting data from other agencies for immigration enforcement purposes, ICE has laid a policy against using mediced data for 12 years for 12 years.
The center of Medicare and Medicade Services has also maintained a policy to use patients only to run its health programs.
“Looking at these policies, and in view of that various players in the Medicade System have trusted them, the agencies were dependent on the process of making a logical decision before replacing them,” Chhabria wrote, “Records firmly suggests that no such procedure took place.”
Chhabriya stated that the initial prohibition will remain effective until HHS provides “decision -making” for its new policy of sharing data with immigration officers or until the conclusion of litigation.
The disclosure of medicade data is part of the wider effort of the Trump administration to give more data to the DHS of the Trump administration, which helps migrants to find and complete the President’s Public Exile Scheme. In May, a federal judge refused to block the internal revenue service by sharing the tax data of immigrants with ICE officials.
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The disclosure of medicade data is part of a comprehensive effort by the Trump administration to give more data to DHS that helps find migrants. (Saul Loaib/AFP)
California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement, “The Trump administration took steps for long -term policy safety without notice or results without notice or results to use medicade data for immigration enforcement.” “As the President continues to carry forward his authority in his inhuman anti -immigrant crusade, it is a clear reminder that he is bound by law.”
HHS first provided personal information from millions of Medicade Enroll in June, prosecuted from 20 states to block the new policy.
In July, the centers of Medicare and Medicade Services entered a new agreement, allowing daily access to personal data of 79 million Medicade Enroll in the country, including their social security number and home address.
Neither the agreement was announced publicly. HHS has insisted that its agreement with DHS is legal.
Medicid officials tried to block data transfer, but they were Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior was judged by the top advisors of Junior.
Immigrants – both legal and illegal – are not authorized to enroll in the Medicade program, which provides almost free coverage for health services. However, under the federal law, all states should offer emergency Medicade, a temporary coverage that only covers services throughout the life of emergency rooms, including people who are not American citizens.
The judge blocked DHS from using medicid data obtained from 20 states, which sued to prevent data sharing. (Getty image)
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Washington State Attorney General Nick Brown said in a statement, “It is important to protect people’s personal health information.” “And everyone should be able to seek medical care without fear of what the federal government can do with that information.”
Sharing personal data of medicid enrollis may cause concern among those who receive emergency medical aid for their own or their children, warnings by immigration advocates.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.