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Askini said she was able to obtain a temporary passport and arrived safely in Stockholm.

The second case the report highlights is that of Janus Rose, a technology researcher based in New York.

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Rose said she’s had a passport marked with female gender since November. But when she sought a legal name change, the U.S. Passport Office responded by retroactively invalidating the change of gender marker it authorized in 2017.

On July 25, Rose tweeted: “Wow. The U.S. passport office just called and told me that due to an ‘error,’ the government has *retroactively invalidated* the change of gender marker it authorized on my passport last year. They won’t renew my passport w/ correct name & gender until i submit a new doctors note.”

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She added: “Essentially the govt is claiming the doctors letter — which uses the same language as hundreds of other letters my clinic gives out to trans patients — doesn’t meet requirements for a passport gender change. I have a feeling we are about to see more of this gatekeeping very soon.”

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O’Hara said the State Department did not clarify when asked why an already-approved gender marker would be revoked.

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Askini believes she’s being politically targeted.

“I believe that the Trump Administration or someone in the Seattle Passport Office has targeted me politically and politicized the process for obtaining passports,” she told O’Hara. “Their actions and statements are NOT consistent with the actual letter of the code related to trans people.”

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Read the entire report.