Overview
- A federal judge in Mexico City, Ulises Oswaldo Rivera González, granted provisional suspensions to two plaintiffs so they cannot be compelled to provide biometric data for the CURP.
- A Tribunal Colegiado in Yucatán also issued a provisional suspension in a separate case, finding the cautionary measure appropriate while challenges to the reformed statute proceed.
- The Mexico City court set an incidental hearing for September 1 to decide on definitive suspension that would keep protections in place for the duration of the amparo cases.
- RENAPO reports about 27 million people have completed the biometric CURP trámite and plans to begin emailing the digital document from mid‑October for holders to print and laminate at no cost.
- Officials stress the process is voluntary and free, even as the reform designates the biometric CURP as the national identification document and courts flag the irreversibility of biometric capture.