The Trans athlete alleges the prohibition of the US team event. UU., Disclosure of the dispute organizer


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The transgender athletics runner, Sadie Schreiner, published a video on social networks last Sunday that claimed to have been expelled from the USA and Field events (USATF) of the USA in the interior championships of the USATF Maine Association. The president of Usatf Maine said that Schreiner competed in the event and did not occur disqualification.

Schreiner recorded the video while sitting next to a fire in the forest, suggesting that the athlete had just competed at the last organized meeting of Schreiner in the United States.

“It is very likely that I executed what will be my last meeting in the United States,” said Schreiner, then and then added: “I will find a way to continue competing, but I doubt that it is in the United States.”

Schreiner said that USATF changed his policy on transgender eligibility since the one used by the International Olympic Committee (COI), which allows biological men to compete in the women’s category, to the one used by World Athletics, which prohibits any athlete who has experienced the male puber of competing as a woman.

Trans Sadie Schreiner athlete does not compete for the female rit athletics team after Trump’s executive order

Sadie Schreiner ends third in the 200 m race in the Outdoor Athletics Championship of the NCAA DIII at the Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium on May 25, 2024, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post through Getty Images)

The Official Transgender Eligibility Policy of the USATF now refers to world athletics guidelines on its official website. He previously referred to the COI’s policy, as seen in a file through Wayback Machine.

Schreiner claims to have been informed about the change by USATF at 1 in the morning the night before the competition.

“They tried to threaten me saying that they now adopted the transgender world athletics policy,” Schreiner said in the video, and then added: “The United States athletics only did this just to prohibit me from competing.”

USATF president Mark Dennett told Pak Gazette Digital that Schreiner competed in the event in Maine and no disqualification occurred.

“The athlete competed and there were no disqualifications at the meeting,” Dennett said.

Pak Gazette Digital has communicated with Schreiner for a response to Dennett’s statement.

The Usatf updated policy and the alleged Schreiner incident in the Indoor Championship of the Maine Association occurred weeks after a controversial appearance in the USATF Masters Open Championship on March 1.

Maine responds to Trump Admin’s statement violated title IX by allowing transgeans in girls in girls

Sadie Schreiner runs to qualify for the 400M race in the outdoor athletics championships of the NCAA DIII on May 24, 2024 in Myrtle Beach. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post through Getty Images)

There, Schreiner competed on the 400 -meter female board and the 200 -meter race, occupying the first place in both events.

Schreiner won the 400 -meter default board, such as the other participants in The eventAnna Vidolova and Amaris Hiatt, had no registered times and appears as DNS, did not begin.

In the 200 -meter race, Schreiner defeated the 14 -year -old runner -up, Zwange Edwards, the 16 -year -old third -year -old finalist Zariah Hargrove, Leah Walker, 15, and Ainsley Rausch, 18. That event also had multiple participants in the list as DNS, including Jordan Carr, 18, Amanda Taylor, Vidolova, Vidolova again and Paula Damiens, 16.

The appearance of Schreiner and the later victories in that event caused criticism on social networks. Schreiner even suggested that the incident is what caused the recent change.

“Use Track and Field has silently banned trans athletes due to my participation,” Shreiner said.

There has been an ongoing battle on trans inclusion in women’s sports between the state government and the administration of President Donald Trump.

On March 17, the Office of Civil Rights of Health and Human Services (OCR) He announced that he found The Department of Education of Maine, the Association of Directors of Maine and Grelyly High School in violation of Title IX for continuing to allow trans inclusion in girls’ sports.

In the announcement, the department said that Maine had 10 days to correct his policies through an agreement signed or risk derivation to the United States Department of Justice for appropriate actions.

The deadline to meet is emerging within the week.

Trump Admin responds to Maine’s reluctance to ban trans athletes from sports girls

Schreiner previously competed for the Women’s Athletics Team of the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) and gained national notoriety for dominating opponents and frequent social media videos that boast as an openly transgender competitor.

However, Schreiner was inevitable to compete for RIT after the NCAA reviewed its gender eligibility policy on February 6, a day after Trump signed an executive order to prohibit Trans athletes from women’s sports and girls.

RIT provided a statement A Pak Gazette Digital Confirming this on February 12.

“We continue following the NCAA participation policy for students Transgender athletes after the executive order of the Trump administration. Sadie does not participate in the next meeting,” said the statement.

Later, in February, Schreiner published a video claiming that the athlete’s race speed became slower after taking medications to increase estrogen. Schreiner spoke of wanting to speak with the political leaders of the NCAA to discuss the policy before it entered into force.

“They could have seen the results of their previous policy and how it made me equitable, but they didn’t,” said Schreiner. “And I would still love to have that conversation. I would still love to educate more people if they allowed me properly.”

Schreiner has been a controversial figure in female athletics in the last year, especially after an appearance in the Outdoor Athletics Championship of Division III of the NCAA of 2024 in May.

At the beginning of that month, Schreiner competed in the Championship of the League of Liberty and won the 200 and 400 meters female, breaking the 400 -meter record in the process. Schreiner would have ended last for more than two seconds in male competition.

At the end of January, Schreiner boasted after winning an event against female opponents.

“It is not the race I was looking for in this week, my peaks almost fell into the turn and with a bad start my time was almost what I wanted,” the corridor wrote in an Instagram post.

“The good news is that the season has just begun, and I will leave everything on the track of the nationals,” Schreiner added with a transgender pride flag emoji.

Sadie Schreiner puts a transgender flag in her hair before heading to the awards in the Outdoor Athletics Championship of the NCAA DIII on May 25, 2024, in Myrtle Beach. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post through Getty Images)

On January 17, Schreiner took first place in the scripts of 200 and 400 meters at the Brockport on Friday night Rust Buster, occupying the first places on two older people. In the 200 -meter race, Schreiner beat his teammate Rit Caroline Hill for 1.5 seconds and took first place in the 400 -meter race of Marissa Wise in Brockport in almost 3.5 seconds. Schreiner’s results achieved automatic qualification for regional regional athletics championships of the Atlantic.

On January 24, Schreiner took first place in the 200 -meter race in the friday meet rit, surpassing the Junior of the Liberty League, Lexi Rodríguez de Brockport, with an even faster time. On January 30, Schreiner took first place in the scripts of 200 and 400 meters against the opponents of the Liberty League.

Schreiner too hop Against states and universities that did not offer the trans athlete a complete scholarship when Schreiner wanted to transfer in December. The athlete blamed the laws into 25 states that prohibit Trans athletes with girls and women.

“Among all the obstacles that transfers usually have, there is an additional layer because it is trans, 50% of the country prohibited me from participating and that meant that I could not attend any of those universities, even if they contacted me with a complete trip,” said Schreiner.

“It was also clear that the states that did it, regardless of how inflexible the coaches were to have me in their teams, the university administrations would generally prevent them from allowing them to participate.”



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