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On Thursday he marked exactly four months since President Donald Trump signed the executive order to “keep men out of women’s sports.” But the incidents of trans inclusion in girls and women’s sports continue to persist throughout the country.
The force of force of force such as California, Maine, Minnesota, Oregon and Washington have openly challenged the order and deferred instead of their state laws on the subject, which results in national controversies that involve biological men who compete already often dominate the sports of the girls of the high school in recent months.
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The Trump administration has launched research and even filed demands to counteract this wave of incidents. But the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, suggested that the administration could go one step further.
At a press conference on April 18, while discussing Maine’s challenge on the subject, Leavitt affirmed Trump’s order and title IX as Federal Law, noting that offenders could be “processed.”
Since then, many states controlled by Democrats such as Maine and California have refused to accept Trump’s demands.
The former swimmer of the NCAA and influential conservative Riley Gaines, the leading figure in the National Movement to keep men out of women’s sports, told Pak Gazette Digital that he would support the prosecution in response to the problem.
“I would love to see the prosecution because I think what is happening is criminal,” Gaines said. “The way we have been told that the feelings of a man matter more than our physical security, than our rights to participate, to call us champions, I think it is a criminal action, therefore, I think it is a criminal offense.
“Someone somewhere should be an example of, otherwise, the Democratic Party that hates women continues with all the steam ahead.
Gaines, who tied infamously with Trans Lia Thomas swimmer in the 2022 NCAA Women’s Championship, was only one of the many women who were affected by Thomas’s participation. The event was organized at the Georgia and Gaines Institute of Technology, he said he believes that the president of the school, Angel Cabrera, is one of the first who should be online for prosecution on the subject.
“I think that university officials should be accused. I think that in the state of Georgia, that the president of Georgia Tech, who has remained very presumed, who has remained not attesting or responding to any of the statements that we are doing that in his pool deck,” Gaines said of those who should be prosecuted.
Pak Gazette Digital has communicated with Georgia Tech to comment.
Gaines leads a lawsuit against the NCAA for his experience with Thomas along with several other female swimmers who competed in the 2022 Championship. Those plaintiffs include former swimmer from Kentucky University Kaitlyn Wheeler and former swimmer of the University of North Carolina Kylee Alons.
Wheeler and Alons agree with Gaines in supporting criminal prosecution against officials who have allowed Trans athletes in women’s sports.
“I think that if the schools, the official states, whatever, are challenging the law and violating title IX, especially by forcing girls to share changing rooms, change in front of boys, lose their opportunities, it is assumed that all title IX represents, I think there should be serious consequences,” said Wheeler News Digital.
“We are not only talking about policy disagreements, it is about eliminating the rights to the knowing of women and girls. If you violate the Federal Law, there should be consequences such as Riley said, and if that means prosecution in some of these states, then yes, follow it.”
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Alons questioned how one could not be in favor of prosecution against those officials.
“When you see the damage that this is causing women and girls, how could you Don’t you want to support the prosecution of challenging this? “” Alons told Pak Gazette Digital. “There is a lot of harm and obviously there is a law for a reason, because it is causing damage, so it would definitely support more actions than only empty threats.”
The lawyer who represents Gaines, Wheeler, Alons and other women in his lawsuit against the NCAA, William Bock, of the Independent Women’s Sports Council, not only supports the notion that prosecuting officials that allow continuing the problem, but also believes that it is “necessary.”
“At this point there is no excuse, the executive order has been in force since February 5,” Bock to Pak Gazette Digital told. “People have known for four months, and if three months later, federal law is still challenging, then, of course, a prosecution makes sense, and it is obviously necessary to protect women.”
Until now, the Trump application of its executive order has only extended to a freezing of funds to the University of Pennsylvania, where Thomas competed, temporary financing stops against Maine that since then they have ended, and a lawsuit from the Department of Justice against Maine as well.
The Trump administration has launched research against three other state sports leagues of the high school (California, Minnesota and Massachusetts) and the Department of Justice has given California a deadline of this Monday to amend their policies that allow trans athletes in girls’ sports.
Gaines, Wheeler and Alons find Trump’s position on the “refreshing” theme, but they would generally would like to see more action.
“Hopefully we will see enough with warnings, that’s how I feel,” Gaines said. “We are ready to see some action.”
Wheeler added: “The executive order is a good start, but we need more than that firm, we need a really enforceable protection that will replace its presidency … It is a step in the right direction, but we are not satisfied.”
At the university level, Trump’s executive order resulted in a change in the NCAA gender eligibility policy only one day after the order was signed. Unlike the old policy, the new policy states that only women can compete in the category of women in official competition.
However, the new policy has been criticized by women’s rights activists, since it was signed for not offering a tangible scheme of how they will enforce politics and the lack of enforcing gender tests.
At the end of March, Ithaca College in New York admitted to having let a Trans athlete compare in a rowing competition in Division III, telling Pak Gazette Digital that the participation of the trans athlete was due to a “misunderstanding” of the coaching staff about what was considered an official event of the NCAA and referred to the policy of male practice players.

Ithaca College competes in the Grand Final of the Eights during the Division III Rowing Championship held at Nathan Benderson Park on May 29, 2021 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photos of Justin Tafoya/NCAA through Getty Images)
The NCAA has provided a statement to FOX News Digital, saying that the competition in which the Trans Ithaca athlete “competed” will be considered a mixed team and is not eligible to compete against women’s teams. Ithaca declared its intention to adhere to the policy that allows practice opportunities and the NCAA appreciates the ability to respond of ithaca. “
But NCAA did not indicate that the results of the event would be canceled or that it would face any consequence.
The initial objective of the demand of Gaines vs. NCAA was to force the ruling organ to completely keep biological men out of female university sports. Following the policy change, the objective of demand remains intact but also expanded.
“We have communicated with the NCAA and its lawyers and we have given them the opportunity to resolve this matter at least, if we cannot reach an agreement on the responsibility of the past, establish a policy that really protects women and has some execution behind it and guarantees that only women participate in the sports of university women,” Bock said.
“We put it in writing and have not followed that route with us … its policy is without teeth and ineffective and does not protect the rights of women.”
Bock added that his demand will also seek monetary damage to all female athletes that have been affected.
“These are significant damage and there were several hundred damaged women and we believe that a jury in Georgia will find that the very significant amount of damage.”