A $2 Million Verdict for Victim of “Gender Affirming Care”

Lawsuits ruling in favor of “detransitioners” is a good sign, but there’s work to be done.

When she was only 16 years old, a surgeon removed the healthy breast of Fox Varian with the support and recommendation of a psychologist. On Friday, a jury found these medical professionals guilty of malpractice and awarded Varian a settlement of $2 million ($1.6 million for past and future suffering and an additional $400k for future medical expenses). Like the majority of young people who are confused in their bodies during adolescence, Varian has embraced her female body and identity as she has matured. At age 22, she is one of a growing number of “detransitioners,” a group of people who we were assured of just a few years ago did not exist.  

To be clear, the jury did not rule against the therapies, medications, and surgeries that are used in transgender “medicine.” Rather, they ruled that the doctors failed Varian in this particular case. Even so, this verdict will encourage and enable other cases like it to proceed. According to the New York Post28 “detransitioner lawsuits” are already in process across the United States. Also, the size of the financial penalty in Varian’s case should push even more medical professionals and institutions away from experimenting on the bodies of children. 

In fact, three features of Varian’s case make it typical of so many others. First, she had serious and obvious mental health comorbidities as a teenager that were ignored and left untreated. As Benjamin Ryan described in The Free Press 

Fox Varian had a turbulent childhood. Her parents split when she was 7, triggering a three-year custody battle that ultimately saw her estranged from her father. She suffered from a constellation of mental health problems, including depression, anxiety, and social phobia. She was diagnosed with autism and bounced around various schools. Her first period sent her into a meltdown, and she battled disordered eating and body-image issues. By mid-adolescence, she was completely lost. 

And yet, her doctors allowed Varian to self-diagnose, encouraged her to question her “gender,” and to change her name and appearance.  

The second aspect of Varian’s situation that is common to so many other stories, such as that of Chloe Cole, is how quickly she was “fast-tracked” into therapies and surgery that left her with permanent physical harm. According to Varian’s lawyers, it was Kenneth Einhorn, the psychologist, who “drove the train” and “put the idea in Fox’s head” that she needed to change her gender with surgery. What has become clear in the last several years, especially from leaked emails from WPATH doctors, the self-appointed “experts” in what was wrongly called “gender affirming care,” is how unproven these “treatments” were known to be. Essentially, doctors and medical personnel who wanted to experiment on children convinced many others that the science behind the innovative treatments was “settled.” 

Even worse is that they convinced parents. More accurately, and this is the third aspect of this trial that seems to be quite common to almost every other case involving a minor, is that parents were emotionally blackmailed and frightened into giving consent. During the trial, as the New York Post reported, “Varian’s mother, Claire Deacon, testified that she was against the surgery, but consented to it out of fear her daughter would commit suicide . . .” Horrifically, thousands of parents have been asked manipulatively, “Would you rather have a living son or a dead daughter,” either implying or outright stating that parents who did not affirm their child’s new identity would be responsible for their suicide.  

It would be premature to think that the days of being force-fed gender ideology from every area of culture are over. After all, 19 states and the District of Columbia have sued the Department of Health and Human Services over its policies to restrict harmful and experimental gender “treatments” on minors. However, verdicts like this one, in New York of all places, should embolden healthcare professionals and parents alike to reject gender ideology, especially when it comes to children.  

Every single doctor, hospital, psychologist, and therapist who rushed a child to permanent damage, ignored obvious and important comorbidities, and threatened parents with the “suicide myth” should be found, charged, fined, and jailed. Teachers, administrators, school boards, and school counselors must also be scrutinized and exposed for leading children down this destructive and harmful path. 

Thankfully, there is a law firm committed to taking on such cases. If you are someone who has detransitioned, or if your child was manipulated and harmed in the name of “gender affirming care,” contact Campbell, Miller, Payne to learn about your legal options. The rest of us, especially pastors and ministry leaders, should provide as much support, love, and encouragement as we possibly can to these children and their families.

Copyright 2026 by the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. Reprinted from BreakPoint.org with permission.

Plaque in Minnesota Capitol Thanks Governor for “Allowing the Spread of Satanism”

Above: In 2018 the Satanic Temple parked a trailer carrying a statue of the figure baphomet in front of the Arkansas Capitol Building (File Photo).

A satanic plaque displayed in the Minnesota State Capitol is thanking Governor Tim Walz for “allowing the spread of Satanism.”

The plaque, from a group calling itself the “Democrat Coalition of Satan Worshippers,” reads: “The Democrat Coalition of Satan Worshippers thanks Gov. Tim Walz for not standing in the way of spreading Satanism in the state Capitol building. Satan has a special place for you.”

CBN reports Minnesota State Representative Pam Altendorf discovered the display on the ground floor of the Capitol building and shared video of it on social media. The plaque was originally installed last April and was supposed to be temporary. However, the plaque has remained in place.

This isn’t the first time satanic groups have targeted government buildings with controversial displays. The Satanic Temple, for example, has a long history of stirring up controversy around the the country — including in Arkansas.

In 2023, the Satanic Temple placed pro-abortion billboards across Arkansas claiming “Abortions Save Lives.” The group has also opposed Arkansas’ Ten Commandments monument at the State Capitol and even parked a 7½-foot statue of the satanic figure baphomet on a trailer in front of the Arkansas Capitol Building in 2018 after state leaders refused to place the statue on the Capitol lawn permanently.

Arkansans should be grateful that our state leaders have consistently stood against satanic displays like the one in Minnesota. Arkansas has maintained strong protections for religious liberty while refusing to yield to groups that simply want to mock and offend. That is something we should not take for granted.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Texas, North Dakota Attorneys General Take Action Against Abortion Pill Website

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton reportedly has filed a lawsuit against a nurse practitioner in Delaware who, the A.G. says, “operates an extremist group known as Her Safe Harbor that ships abortion drugs into Texas.”

Attorney General Paxton also has sent cease-and-desist orders to Plan C and Coeytaux, ordering them to stop promoting, selling, or facilitating the shipment of abortion drugs to Texans.

Similarly, North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley recently issued a cease-and-desist order against an organization he says is promoting the illegal sale of abortion pills online.

The Prairie Abortion Fund is accused of violating the state’s Consumer Fraud Law by directing women to websites that sell unapproved and dangerous abortion drugs.

These websites allegedly let anyone buy abortion drugs without providing health information, verifying their identity, or confirming their age, and without a prescription from a doctor.

Arkansas has faced similar problems with abortion pill websites in the past — and our A.G. has taken similar actions against out-of-state abortionists.

Arkansas law generally prohibits abortion except to save the life of the mother, and it prohibits abortion drugs from being delivered by mail.

However, some abortionists still advertise abortion pills online and ship abortion drugs across state lines.

Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin has issued cease-and-desist letters to companies responsible for marketing abortion pills to Arkansans in violation of state law. The A.G. says some of these entities are deliberately targeting women in Arkansas and may be running afoul of the Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.

Abortion pills end the lives of unborn children and carry serious risks for women. They simply should not be for sale in America.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.