The R.I. Coalition Against Domestic Violence and a nationwide group of other state domestic violence and sexual assault coalitions filed today an amended complaint and a motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO) asking the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island to block the Trump administration from enforcing unlawful new restrictions on grants issued to help victims of domestic violence and other crimes.

The filings follow a lawsuitRhode Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence, et al. v. Bondi – filed in June 2025 that successfully obtained preliminary relief against the administration’s conditions on federal funding for life-saving programs administered by the U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Office on Violence Against Women (OVW). DOJ’s efforts targeted grantees that implement diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, and efforts that recognize and respect people regardless of gender identity. The court issued a preliminary order in August 2025, blocking DOJ from enforcing its unlawful restrictions, which would have made it impossible for many grantees to operate legally or effectively.

Now, DOJ has imposed additional conditions on critical grant funding administered by the Office of Justice Programs (OJP) in its Office for Victims of Crime (OVC). These new conditions include restrictions and limitations that would prevent providers from serving certain noncitizen survivors. The coalition argues that the conditions are unauthorized, vague, and that they fail to account for the devastating consequences they will have.

The amended complaint expands the coalition’s original lawsuit and asks the court to halt enforcement of the new restrictions while the case proceeds. The complaint argues that the administration’s new conditions exceed DOJ’s authority, violate the Constitution, conflict with statutory requirements protecting communities in vulnerable situations, and unlawfully leverage the threat of False Claims Act liability to pressure providers to alter their programming and speech. The newest unlawful conditions once again put organizations in the impossible position of having to either risk severe financial penalties and undermine their missions or sacrifice essential funding that supports survivors of violence.

Read the amended complaint here and the motion for temporary restraining order here. All documents in the case can be found here.

The coalition issued the following statement:

“Funding for victims of crime has supported lifesaving services for domestic violence and sexual assault survivors and strengthened communities nationwide. These grants help sustain shelters, crisis response services, legal assistance, prevention programs, and coordinated community efforts that victims rely on in moments of profound danger. The administration’s new restrictions threaten to undermine that work, create confusion and fear among providers and survivors alike, and place critical resources at risk. We are asking the court to ensure that congressionally authorized grants can continue to support survivors as Congress intended, without unlawful political conditions attached.”

Steven Brown, executive director of the ACLU of RI, added: “Each additional attempt by the federal government to restrict funding for these life-saving services — now weaponizing citizenship status to exclude survivors from receiving support — is as cruel and unlawful as the last. We will continue to use every legal avenue to defend this funding.”

The coalition includes the California Partnership to End Domestic Violence; Colorado Coalition Against Sexual Assault; District of Columbia Coalition Against Domestic Violence; End Domestic Abuse Wisconsin: The Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Georgia Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Hawaiʻi State Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Idaho Coalition Against Sexual and Domestic Violence; Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Iowa Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Jane Doe Inc. (The Massachusetts Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence); Kansas Coalition Against Sexual and Domestic Violence; Maine Coalition to End Domestic Violence; Maryland Network Against Domestic Violence; Montana Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence; New Jersey Coalition to End Domestic Violence; North Carolina Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Oregon Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence; Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence; Rhode Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence; VALORUS; Vermont Network Against Domestic and Sexual Violence; Violence Free Minnesota; Virginia Sexual and Domestic Violence Action Alliance; Washington State Coalition Against Domestic Violence; and Wisconsin Coalition Against Sexual Assault. They are represented by Democracy Forward, Jacobson Lawyers Group, Lawyers’ Committee for Rhode Island, Lynette Labinger for the ACLU Foundation of Rhode Island, and the National Women’s Law Center.

Related Content

News & Commentary
Jun 30, 2025
Pink and dark red graphic including ACLU of RI, RICADV, and Lawyer's Committee for RI logos
  • First Amendment

RI Coalition Against Domestic Violence Seeks Injunction Against Trump Administration Grant Requirements

Attorneys for the Rhode Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence (RICADV) and a nationwide group of 16 other state domestic violence and sexual assault coalitions have asked a federal judge to issue a preliminary injunction against a host of unlawful grant restrictions
News & Commentary
Jun 16, 2025
Pink and dark red graphic including ACLU of RI, RICADV, and Lawyer's Committee for RI logos
  • First Amendment

Challenging New Federal Grant Requirements, ACLU Of RI, Lawyers’ Committee for RI and National Organizations Sue on Behalf of RI Coalition Against Domestic Violence, National Coalitions

A nationwide group of 17 state domestic violence and sexual assault coalitions, led by the Rhode Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence (RICADV), filed a lawsuit today seeking to stop the Trump administration from imposing unlawful restrictions on grants
News & Commentary
Aug 08, 2025
Pink and dark red graphic including ACLU of RI, RICADV, and Lawyer's Committee for RI logos
  • First Amendment

Court Blocks Trump-Vance Administration’s Unlawful Restrictions on Violence Against Women Act Grants

In a victory for survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault and the state coalitions, a federal court in Rhode Island today issued a preliminary order blocking the Trump-Vance administration from enforcing many of the new unlawful restrictions on grants from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women.
Court Case
Aug 08, 2025
Pink and dark red graphic including ACLU of RI, RICADV, and Lawyer's Committee for RI logos
  • First Amendment

RI Coalition Against Domestic Violence v. Bondi

A nationwide group of 17 state domestic violence and sexual assault coalitions, led by the Rhode Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence (RICADV), filed a lawsuit seeking to stop the Trump administration from imposing unlawful restrictions on grants issued by the Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) under the federal Violence Against Women Act (VAWA).