Federal Judge Blocks Health Department from Sharing Medicaid Data with DHS, Halting Controversial Immigration Enforcement Policy in 20 State
Published Time: 08-17-2025, 15:45
A federal judge has temporarily stopped the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) from sharing personal data of Medicaid enrollees with deportation officials. The ruling comes after a lawsuit filed by 20 states challenged the legality and privacy risks of a data-sharing agreement that granted the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) access to sensitive information.
Federal Judge Issues Nationwide Block
The order, issued by Judge Vince Chhabria of the U.S. District Court in California, prevents HHS from giving DHS access to the records of nearly 79 million Medicaid beneficiaries. The agreement had allowed DHS to review personal details, including home addresses and Social Security numbers, raising alarm over how immigration enforcement could affect public health programs.
Judge Chhabria, appointed under the Obama administration, emphasized the risk of undermining the Medicaid system itself.
“Using CMS data for immigration enforcement threatens to significantly disrupt the operation of Medicaid—a program that Congress has deemed critical for the nation’s most vulnerable residents,” Chhabria wrote in his ruling.
The injunction will remain in place until HHS can provide what the judge described as “reasoned decisionmaking” to justify its policy shift.
How the Data-Sharing Agreement Began
The data transfer first came to light in June, when The Associated Press reported that Medicaid enrollee information had been shared with DHS in several states. By July, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) expanded the arrangement into a nationwide agreement, allowing DHS daily access to personal details of all Medicaid enrollees.
The deal was never formally announced, sparking criticism that the policy had been implemented without adequate transparency. According to court filings, the access would have given deportation officials unprecedented visibility into health data, raising constitutional and ethical questions.
States Push Back Against the Policy
Twenty states—including California, Arizona, Washington, and New York—filed lawsuits to stop the data-sharing program. The states argued that the agreement endangered the privacy of millions of lawful residents and U.S. citizens while discouraging immigrants from seeking medical care.
Nick Brown, Attorney General of Washington state, said in a statement:
“Protecting people’s private health information is vitally important. Everyone should be able to seek medical care without fear of what the federal government may do with that information.”
Wider Immigration Enforcement Efforts
The Medicaid case is part of a broader effort under the Trump administration to expand access to federal data for immigration enforcement. In May, a separate federal court declined to block the Internal Revenue Service from sharing immigrants’ tax records with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Those records have been used to locate and detain individuals living without legal status in the United States.
Immigration advocates argue that linking federal data programs with deportation enforcement undermines trust in essential services such as healthcare, schools, and public safety institutions. Critics say families may avoid emergency medical treatment if they fear their information could be shared with immigration authorities.
What Medicaid Provides and Who Qualifies
Medicaid, a joint federal and state program, provides low-cost or no-cost healthcare coverage for millions of Americans, particularly low-income families, children, seniors, and people with disabilities. By law, undocumented immigrants and some categories of legally present immigrants are ineligible for full Medicaid coverage.
However, emergency Medicaid—a limited benefit program—requires states to cover emergency room services for anyone in need of lifesaving care, regardless of immigration status. Advocates fear the new data-sharing policy could deter even eligible patients from seeking urgent medical help.
HHS Response
The Department of Health and Human Services has defended its agreement with DHS, insisting that it complies with federal law. A spokesperson for the department declined to confirm whether the agency would immediately halt data-sharing activities following Judge Chhabria’s order.
Despite the legal setback, HHS has maintained that the agreement was intended to strengthen government oversight, though critics argue it was designed primarily to expand immigration enforcement.
Implications Moving Forward
The ruling highlights an ongoing tension between immigration enforcement priorities and public health protections. While the court’s order is temporary, it represents a significant win for states and advocates who argued that Medicaid should remain a safeguard for vulnerable populations, not a tool for deportation agencies.
Legal experts say the case could set a precedent for how far the federal government can go in repurposing sensitive data collected for public services. The outcome may also influence how immigrant communities engage with healthcare providers in the months ahead.
For now, the injunction ensures that the personal data of tens of millions of Medicaid enrollees will remain shielded from immigration enforcement while the case proceeds.
Source: AP News – Judge orders RFK Jr.’s health department to stop sharing Medicaid data with deportation officials