Mirabelli v. Bonta
Case Snapshot
California requires its public schools to hide children’s expressed transgender status at school from their parents and to facilitate those children’s transitions regardless of their parents’ religious beliefs. Religious parents and teachers challenged this policy after families learned they were being kept in the dark. In one family’s case, the parents discovered what their public school had been doing behind their backs only after their daughter attempted suicide. The case is now before the Supreme Court, where Becket is urging the Court to protect the parents and teachers by applying Becket’s victory in Mahmoud v. Taylor.
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Case Summary
California keeps parents in the dark
California’s Department of Education issued guidance that directed public schools to treat a student’s expressed transgender status at school as private information that could be withheld from parents. Schools were told to respect a student’s wishes about who could be informed—including whether parents would be told at all—and to avoid sharing that information except in rare situations. As a result, parents across California have been left unaware when schools begin treating their children as a different gender during the school day, and teachers have been forced to carry out that secrecy and deception.
Religious parents and teachers push back
With the help of LiMandri & Jonna and Thomas More Society, a group of parents and teachers filed a lawsuit challenging California’s secret transition policy. Catholic families involved in the case discovered that their children had been socially transitioned at school without their knowledge or consent, cutting them out of decisions central to their children’s upbringing and faith. In one family’s case, the parents learned what had been happening only after their daughter attempted suicide. Teachers also challenged the policy, arguing that being required to hide a student’s transgender status from parents violated their deeply held religious beliefs about honoring the role of parents as the primary guides in raising their children. These families still don’t know how the schools are interacting with their children on this important and sensitive issue.
In December 2025, a federal district court ruled for the parents and teachers and blocked California’s secret transition policy, relying in part on Becket’s landmark Supreme Court victory in Mahmoud v. Taylor. Days later, a federal appeals court put that ruling on hold. On January 8, 2026, the parents and teachers filed an emergency application asking the Supreme Court to restore their hard-won protection.
Becket defends parents’ right to raise their children according to their faith
On January 20, 2026, Becket filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the parents and teachers. The brief urges the Supreme Court to protect the right of parents to raise and educate their children according to their faith. It explains that the Court has long recognized this principle—from its earliest parental-rights decisions to its recent ruling in Mahmoud v. Taylor—and that these protections do not disappear when families choose public schools.
Becket’s brief also notes that disputes over schools transitioning children without parental knowledge are increasingly common, reaching courts across the country. This case gives the Supreme Court an opportunity to reaffirm its existing precedent and provide clear guidance to lower courts and school districts, ensuring that parents are not sidelined in matters central to family life, and children’s wellbeing and religious upbringing.
Importance to religious liberty:
- Parental rights: Parents have the right to direct the religious upbringing of their children—an authority parents do not surrender at the schoolhouse door. Teachings around family life and human sexuality lie at the heart of most religions. On such core questions, Becket defends the religious authority of parents.