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A third transgender athlete has sued an American university in the period of a month in response to the ongoing national repression against biological men in women’s sports.
However, the last lawsuit also states that a trans athlete was reinstated to a women’s team in April despite the NCAA policy and the federal law that prohibited it.
Track and Field’s runner, Evelyn Parts, is demanding Swarthmore College and the NCAA, claiming that the school violated title IX when she prohibited the parties from competing in the female athletics team earlier this year.
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Parts alleges that the school said that the pieces could no longer compete in the women’s team in February, the same month in which the NCAA changed its gender eligibility policy to prevent biological men from competing in the category of women after President Donald Trump signed the executive order to “keep men out of women’s sports.”
The demand for pieces also states that the Trans athlete “reinstated” the Swarthmore female athletics team on April 11. Parts states that they were allowed to compete in the women’s team until graduated in May, even after Trump’s policy and executive order entered into force.
Parts appears as the winner of the 10,000 female meters in Bill Butler Invitational in April and as a participant in the invitation of Paul Donahue that same month and the centenary championship in early May, according to the athlete’s Swarthmore athletics page.
Pak Gazette Digital has communicated with Swarthmore College and the NCAA to comment.
Parts demanded less than a month after their companion Trans Sadie Schreiner filed a lawsuit against Princeton University after it was allegedly excluded from a female race in May.
The demand for pieces was filed less than a week after the trans volleyball player, Emma Morquecho, filed a lawsuit against the University of Westcliff and the National Intercollegial Athlete Association (NAIA), an alternative university sports government agency to the NCAA, claiming that a scholarship offer was revoked and eligible for him eligibility.
Upenn’s former swimmer reflects on being teammates with Lia Thomas
The demands presented by Trans athletes against schools that have excluded them from women’s sports are a growing trend after Trump’s new federal mandate on the subject. Contrast with the previous trend of female athletes that demand the NCAA and the universities for having to compete and share changing rooms with biological men.
Former President Joe Biden had an executive order that protected the rights of trans athletes to compete in women’s sports, and the previous NCAA policy allowed trans athletes. The participation of the former Trans swimmer from the University of Pennsylvania, Lia Thomas, and the former trans volleyball player from the state of San José, Blaire Fleming, caused multiple demands against these institutions and the NCAA led by Riley Gaines and Brooke Slusser.
Schreiner was allowed to compete previously in the Women’s Athletics Team of the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) for two years before the change of rules of the February NCAA. The former Women Athletics brokerage, Caroline Hill, joined Gaines’ demand against the NCAA, citing her experience competing and sharing a costume with Schreiner.
The parties are represented by lawyer Susie Cirilli, the same lawyer who represents Schreiner in the lawsuit against Princeton.
Cirilli provided a statement to Pak Gazette Digital demand to direct parts.
“We support the accusations of the complaint. As indicated in the complaint, the NCAA is a private organization that issued an intolerant policy. Swarthmore chose to follow that policy and ignore the federal and state law,” said Cirilli.
Cirilli previously provided a statement to Pak Gazette Digital by directing Schreiner’s lawsuit against Princeton.
“The action of the two Princeton officials had a shameless and deliberate contempt for Sadie’s rights as a transgender woman under the control of the New Jersey Law,” said the statement. “The actions of the defendants were completely intolerable in a civilized community and go beyond the possible limits of decency.”
The Trump Department of Education has already taken measures against multiple universities on trans inclusion incidents in women’s sports before Trump’s executive order. The DOE reached an agreement with UpenN on Thomas’s participation in female swimming in early July. The university agreed to expel the records of the trans athlete and apologize with all the female athletes affected by the presence of Thomas in the women’s team.
At the beginning of August, the DOE reached an agreement with Wagner College for a similar resolution with respect to former Trans Redmond Sullivan.
Doe’s investigation into the state of San José on Fleming’s controversy is ongoing.
If the accusations of pieces are true, Swarthmore would be the second school with a registered instance of a Trans athlete competing in a female team after the NCAA policy change and Trump’s executive order in February.
Ithaca College in New York admitted to having allowed an athlete Trans to compete in a rowing competition in Division III in March. The Trans athlete competed in the Cayuga duals, but only in the third university event eight, which is not taken into account NCAA Championship qualification.
Ithaca provided a statement to Pak Gazette Digital saying that the participation of the trans athlete was due to a “misunderstanding” of the coaching staff.
The NCAA provided a statement to FOX News Digital that addresses the breach of Ithaca’s policy.
“Politics is clear that there are no exemptions available, and students assigned to men at birth may not compete in a team of women with modified birth certificates or other forms of identification,” said the NCAA.
“If the competition occurs, the team 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 opportunities for practice, and the NCAA appreciates the ability to respond from Ithaca.”
The NCAA did not indicate whether the results of the event would be canceled or if ithaca will face any consequence.