Current:Home > MyDiscrimination lawsuit brought by transgender athlete sent back to Minnesota trial court -ChatGPT
Discrimination lawsuit brought by transgender athlete sent back to Minnesota trial court
View
Date:2025-04-15 02:23:24
A Minnesota appeals court has sent the lawsuit brought by a transgender athlete back to a trial court to determine whether she was illegally denied entry into women’s competitions because of her gender identity.
JayCee Cooper, a transgender woman, sued USA Powerlifting in 2021 after the organization denied her 2018 request for participation. She alleged the organization violated the Minnesota Human Rights Act, an anti-discrimination law which includes gender identity.
Last year, a district court judge found that USA Powerlifting had discriminated against Cooper. USA Powerlifting appealed, and Cooper cross-appealed. In its lengthy Monday decision, the Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed, reversed and sent back parts of the case.
Judge Matthew Johnson wrote: “The circumstantial evidence on which Cooper relies, when viewed in a light most favorable to her, is sufficient to allow a fact-finder to draw inferences and thereby find that USAPL excluded Cooper from its competitions because of her sexual orientation (i.e., transgender status).”
Gender Justice Legal Director Jess Braverman, an attorney for Cooper, said, “We agree that it’s illegal to discriminate against transgender people in Minnesota, but we think it’s crystal clear that that’s what USA Powerlifting did in this case, so we don’t agree with the court’s ultimate conclusion that the case needs to go back for a trial, and we’re currently weighing all of our options.”
Cooper could ask the Minnesota Supreme Court to review the decision, or go back to the lower court to keep litigating the case, Braverman said.
Ansis Viksnins, USA Powerlifting’s lead attorney, welcomed the decision as having “corrected some of the mistakes” made by the lower court and has given their side an opportunity “to tell our side of the story” to a jury.
“USA Powerlifting did not exclude Ms. Cooper because of her gender identity,” Viksnins said. “USA Powerlifting excluded her from competing in the women’s division because of her physiology. She was born biologically male and went through puberty as a male, and as a result, she has significant strength advantages over other people who would be competing in the women’s division.”
Cooper asked USA Powerlifting for a “therapeutic-use exemption” to take spironolactone, a medicine prescribed to treat her gender dysphoria, “but JayCee was denied because she’s transgender,” Braverman said.
She filed a complaint in 2019 with the Minnesota Department of Human Rights, but withdrew it before reaching a decision. The department filed an amicus brief in the lawsuit in support of Cooper, Braverman said.
In schools and private clubs across the country, transgender people’s participation in sports has become a contentious issue. Many Republican-led states have banned transgender people from participating in high school and collegiate sports.
Last week, a group of college athletes, including swimmer Riley Gaines, sued the NCAA, alleging the organization violated their Title IX rights by allowing Lia Thomas, who is a transgender woman, to compete in the 2022 national championships.
veryGood! (51)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Sperm donor father of at least 550 kids banned from donating any more sperm
- Maryland Apple store workers face hurdles after their vote to unionize
- Apple workers in Atlanta become company's 1st retail workers to file to unionize
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Hal Walker: The Man Who Shot The Moon
- What the latest U.S. military aid to Ukraine can tell us about the state of the war
- Second convoy of U.S. citizens fleeing Khartoum arrives at Port Sudan
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- How everyday materials can make innovative new products
Ranking
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Xi tells Zelenskyy China will send envoy to Ukraine to discuss political settlement of war with Russia
- Transcript: Rep. Ro Khanna on Face the Nation, April 30, 2023
- The Environmental Cost of Crypto
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Grubhub offered free lunches in New York City. That's when the chaos began
- Why Beauty Babes Everywhere Love Ariana Grande's R.E.M. Beauty
- Kenya starvation cult death toll hits 90 as morgues fill up: Nothing prepares you for shallow mass graves of children
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Emily Ratajkowski Broke Up With Eric André Before He Posted That NSFW Photo
Users beware: Apps are using a loophole in privacy law to track kids' phones
Elon Musk denies a report accusing him of sexual misconduct on a SpaceX jet
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Ted Bundy's Ex-Lover Tells Terrifying Unheard Story From His Youth in Oxygen's Killers on Tape
ISIS chief killed in Syria by Turkey's intelligence agency, Erdogan says
Coronation Chair renovated and ready for King Charles III after 700 years of service