A Dominican flag flying against a blue sky for an article about anti-gay military laws being struck down

Dominican Republic’s top court strikes down anti-gay military and police laws

The Dominican Republic’s Constitutional Court has ruled that laws criminalizing same-sex conduct among police officers and soldiers are unconstitutional — ending a legal regime that exposed LGBTQ+ service members to imprisonment simply for who they are. The decision, made public on November 18, 2025 C.E., is the most significant LGBTQ+ rights ruling in the country’s history.

At a glance

  • Anti-gay military laws: The court struck down Article 210 of the Police Code and Article 260 of the Armed Forces Code, which punished same-sex conduct with up to two years in prison — with no equivalent penalties for heterosexual acts.
  • Constitutional grounds: Judgment TC/1225/25 found both articles violated Dominican constitutional protections for privacy, nondiscrimination, the free development of personality, and the right to work.
  • Regional pattern: Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela, and the United States had already taken steps to remove similar anti-gay military laws from their security forces before this ruling.

What the court actually said

The ruling does not use ambiguous language. The court stated plainly that “no regulation issued by state authorities or private individuals may diminish or restrict in any way a person’s rights based on their sexual orientation, an essential aspect of personal privacy and the free development of personality.”

Crucially, it also found that the criminalization of same-sex conduct in the security forces lacked “a legitimate constitutional interest.” That framing matters. It does not merely carve out a narrow exemption — it establishes a broad constitutional floor beneath which anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination cannot legally stand in the Dominican Republic.

For LGBTQ+ officers, the immediate effect is practical and deeply personal. They can now serve without fear that their private lives could trigger prosecution, dismissal, or imprisonment. Advocates say the constitutional grounding — especially the privacy and free-development framing — opens genuine avenues for future litigation in employment, healthcare, and family law.

Civil society pushed this across the finish line

The ruling did not arrive on its own. Lawyers Anderson Javiel Dirocie De León and Patricia M. Santana Nina brought the constitutional challenge, calling it “the first case of general applicability advancing equality and dignity for LGBTI people in the Dominican Republic.” Human Rights Watch, which submitted an amicus curiae brief to the court in August 2024 C.E., argued that the laws violated international standards — including protections emphasized by the United Nations independent expert on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Strategic litigation — the deliberate use of court systems to dismantle discriminatory law — has become one of the most effective tools available to LGBTQ+ advocates across Latin America and the Caribbean. This ruling adds a clear data point to that record.

Where the Dominican Republic fits in a changing region

Latin America presents a complicated picture. Argentina, Chile, and Colombia have extended marriage equality and broad anti-discrimination protections. The Dominican Republic sits in a different position — its constitution explicitly limits marriage to opposite-sex couples, and it lacks comprehensive civil anti-discrimination legislation, gender identity recognition for transgender people, and civil union rights.

In the wider Caribbean, five Anglophone countries — Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago — still criminalize consensual same-sex conduct, a legacy of British colonial law. Globally, 65 countries still criminalize same-sex conduct. Human Rights Watch has called on President Luis Abinader and Congress to use the momentum of this ruling to advance long-overdue anti-discrimination and anti-violence protections.

That work remains unfinished. The distance between a court ruling and comprehensive legal equality is long, and conservative political opposition to expanded LGBTQ+ protections is a real force in Dominican politics. Enforcement of the ruling’s spirit will require sustained pressure from civil society.

A precedent with reach

Still, the precedent exists now. The human rights principle the court has established — that the state cannot punish people for who they are — is a foundation that advocates can build on, case by case, law by law.

Cristian González Cabrera, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, put it directly: “This ruling is a resounding affirmation that a more inclusive future is both possible and required under Dominican law.” That affirmation came from the highest court in the land. In a region still working through the legacy of colonial-era laws and institutional resistance, that is not a small thing.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has long pushed member states to bring security-force codes in line with inter-American human rights standards. With this decision, the Dominican Republic has taken a meaningful step toward that alignment — and given LGBTQ+ advocates across the Caribbean a legal model worth studying.

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For more on this story, see: Human Rights Watch

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