logo
Lawyers look to have Trump dropped from NH transgender sports ban lawsuit

Lawyers look to have Trump dropped from NH transgender sports ban lawsuit

Yahoo09-06-2025
Attorneys for the Trump administration have filed a motion seeking to be dropped from a lawsuit filed by two transgender teens fighting a New Hampshire law and a presidential executive order banning them from playing girls school sports.
The families of Parker Tirrell, 16, and Iris Turmelle, 14, and the civil rights advocates representing them filed a motion in February in U.S. District Court in Concord to expand their lawsuit to challenge President Donald Trump's executive order banning transgender athletes from playing in girls and women's sports.
In a motion filed Friday, Deputy Associate Attorney General Richard Lawson argued attorneys for Tirrell and Turmelle — following months of litigation challenging state law — are now attempting to 'drag the federal government into a lawsuit well under way not because of any imminent injury, but because of a generalized grievance with policies set by the President of the United States.'
GLAD Law and the ACLU of New Hampshire are representing Tirrell and Turmelle, who sued state Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut, members of the State Board of Education and the students' respective school districts in August. The case challenges HB 1205, also known as the 'Fairness in Women's Sports Act,' signed into law last July.
The law requires athletes in grades 5-12 to play on interscholastic or club teams matching the sex on their birth certificates. In September, U.S. District Court Chief Judge Landya McCafferty blocked enforcement of the law while it is being challenged in court.
Trump signed an executive order on Feb. 5 called 'Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports' to bar transgender girls and women from playing in girls and women's sports.
Just two days after attorneys for Tirrell and Turmelle filed their motion to add Trump as a defendant in their lawsuit, the New Hampshire Interscholastic Athletic Association told schools to abide by the order, saying in a news release that noncompliance could lead to 'possible consequences to federal funding.'
In the motion filed Friday, Lawson argued attorneys for Tirrell and Turmelle failed to claim the federal defendants have taken 'a single action' to implement the executive order against the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs' schools, or 'even in the state of New Hampshire.'
'What's worse, plaintiffs' attempts to rope the federal defendants into this case are based on flawed understanding of Equal Protection law' and separation of powers, the motion states.
'Plaintiffs lack constitutional standing and their stated speculative risk of future injury is not close to imminent and may never become ripe,' Lawson argued in his motion.
The motion asks the judge to dismiss the claims against Trump, the justice and education departments and department heads.
'Plaintiffs assert a Fifth Amendment equal protection claim alleging that the 'Sports Order' impermissibly discriminates 'on the basis of sex,'' Lawson wrote, adding the plaintiffs also argued the order discriminates based on 'transgender status.'
'The Sports Order simply reaffirms that males and females are not similarly situated when it comes to sports,' Lawson wrote. 'The Supreme Court recognizes that 'differences between men and women' are 'enduring' and thus sex is not an inherently 'proscribed classification.' The biological differences between the sexes make them dissimilarly situated in sports, with males having a distinct physical advantage.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Latest: Trump warns of ‘very severe consequences' if Putin continues Ukraine war
The Latest: Trump warns of ‘very severe consequences' if Putin continues Ukraine war

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Latest: Trump warns of ‘very severe consequences' if Putin continues Ukraine war

The Latest: Trump warns of 'very severe consequences' if Putin continues Ukraine war U.S. President Donald Trump said Wednesday that there will be 'very severe consequences' if Russian President Vladimir Putin does not agree to stop his war in Ukraine after their Friday summit in Alaska, though he did not say what those consequences might be. Trump's comment came after a virtual meeting with European leaders, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who told the group that Putin 'is bluffing' about seeking peace. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said the leaders had a 'constructive and good' discussion with Trump. Here's the latest: NY attorney general sues Zelle's parent company after Trump administration drops similar case Letitia James, a Democrat, sued Early Warning Services in state court, alleging that it failed to protect users from fraud by not including critical safety features in Zelle's design. Earlier this year the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau abandoned a similar case after Trump fired its leader and gutted the agency. In a statement, James' office noted that its suit came after the CFPB dropped its lawsuit following a 'change in the federal administration.' 'No one should be left to fend for themselves after falling victim to a scam,' James said. 'I look forward to getting justice for the New Yorkers who suffered because of Zelle's security failures.' Zelle called the lawsuit 'a political stunt to generate press, not progress.' James has been a leading antagonist of Trump and sued him dozens of times. Last week AP and other outlets reported that the Justice Department subpoenaed her as part of an investigation into whether she violated Trump's civil rights. Leaving a top administration post? Trump may have an ambassadorship for you Diplomacy may be soft power, but in this administration it's also a soft landing. National security adviser Mike Waltz was nominated as U.N. ambassador after he mistakenly added a journalist to a Signal chat discussing military plans. Then Trump tapped IRS Commissioner Billy Long as envoy to Iceland after Long contradicted administration messaging less than two months on the job. And last weekend he named State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce as deputy U.N. representative after she struggled to gel with Secretary of State Marco Rubio's team. The appointments can be viewed as consolation prizes for leaving a high-profile post following rocky tenures. They also reflect the degree to which Trump is trying to keep loyalists close, even if their earlier placements were ill-fitting. Breaking with his former reality TV show 'The Apprentice,' Trump is not telling his appointees 'You're fired!' but instead offering them another way to stay in his administration. ▶ Read more about ambassadorships for administration officials Mexico says 26 capos sent to US were requested by Trump administration, not part of tariff talks Mexico sent the alleged cartel figures to face justice in the United States because the administration requested them and Mexico did not want them to continue running their illicit businesses from Mexican prisons, officials said Wednesday. The mass transfer was not, however, part of wider negotiations as Mexico seeks to avoid higher tariffs threatened by Trump, the officials said. 'These transfers are not only a strategic measure to ensure public safety but also reflect a firm determination to prevent these criminals from continuing to operate from within prisons and to break up their networks of influence,' Mexican Security Minister Omar García Harfuch said in a news conference on Wednesday. The prisoners were wanted by U.S. authorities for their roles in drug trafficking and other crimes. In February 29 other cartel leaders were sent to the U.S. ▶ Read more about the cartel figures being expelled from Mexico Brazil's Lula announces $5.5 billion in credits for exporters hit by US tariffs The 'Sovereign Brazil' plan also contains other measures in response to 50% tariffs imposed by Trump on several products from the South American nation. President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said the plan, which includes a bill to be sent to Congress, is a first step to help exporters. The other measures include postponing tax charges for companies affected by the tariffs, providing 5 billion reais ($930,000) in tax credits to small- and medium-size companies until the end of 2026 and expanding access to insurance against cancelled orders. The plan also incentivizes public purchases of items that could not be exported to the United States. Brazil's government is also granting a one-year extension of tax credits for companies that import items so they can produce goods for exportation. Trump rolls back Biden-era antitrust order The president has revoked an executive order signed by President Joe Biden that was intended to better foster competition through stronger antitrust enforcement. Trump's new order nullifies the 'Promoting Competition in the American Economy' action of 2021. The move comes as part of a broader push to promote deregulation while watering down — or wiping out entirely — anti-monopoly protections. Guard troops expected to ramp up DC missions Thursday National Guard officials say they expect troops to start doing more missions in Washington that day because orders and plans are still being developed. The White House forecast an increased presence of troops Wednesday night. A Guard spokesman said the significant increase was at the Guard's armory, where troops are staging. The spokesman, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the planning process, said the numbers are getting closer to the 800 troops that the Trump announced Monday that he was activating. Neither Army nor District of Columbia National Guard officials have been able to describe the training backgrounds of the troops who have reported for duty so far. While some Guard members are military police, and thus better suited to a law-enforcement mission, others likely hold jobs that would have offered little training in dealing with civilians or law enforcement. Make space great again? Trump has signed an executive order meant to reduce and streamline regulations in an effort to make the U.S. commercial space industry more competitive. It calls for the creation of an Office of Space Commerce within the Secretary of Transportation. The order also seeks to 'enhance American greatness in space by enabling a competitive launch marketplace' that can 'substantially increase' commercial space activities in the next five years. It directs authorities to ease requirements for commercial license and permit appeals for U.S.-based space operators and to reduce or eliminate many environmental reviews. Trump administration ordered to restore some withheld grant funding to UCLA U.S. District Judge Rita F. Lin ruled that the administration must restore millions of dollars in National Science Foundation grants to the University of California, Los Angeles. Lin ruled late Tuesday that the research grants were suspended for reasons she had already ruled 'arbitrary and capricious' and gave the administration until Aug. 19 to show compliance or explain why it has not restored the funding. It was not immediately clear how much could be returned to UCLA. The school's chancellor said last week that the administration has pulled $584 million in grants from various federal agencies. The judge's ruling applies specifically to NSF grants. The funding was frozen as part of a wider pressure campaign targeting universities that Trump says are out of step with his political agenda. Trump administration fires all members of transportation advisory committees The Transportation Department dismissed all the members of its various Federal Advisory Committees as part of a broad effort to remake the groups of industry, labor and government leaders who helped draft new regulations and proposals. The department said it came in response to a presidential executive order. Labor groups expressed concern. A DOT spokesperson said many of the committees 'have not held a single meeting in over a year, while others have not produced recommendations or advisory reports. Worse, some committees have lost sight of the mission, and have been overrun with individuals' whose sole focus is their radical DEI and climate agenda.' The AFL-CIO's Transportation Trades Department coalition of unions said the committees play an important role helping ensure safety at agencies like the Federal Railroad Administration. A spokeswoman said 'it is crucial that all those affected by safety issues are represented.' Federal agents will patrol the streets 24/7 in Washington, White House says Officials said the number of National Guard troops will ramp up and federal officers will be out around the clock. The changes starting Wednesday night come days after the president made the unprecedented announcement that his administration would take over the police department for at least a month. Democratic Mayor Muriel Bowser is walking a political tightrope. She has called the takeover an 'authoritarian push' but also framed the infusion of officers as a boost to public safety. Hundreds of federal law enforcement and city police officers who patrolled Tuesday night made 43 arrests, compared with about two dozen the night before. Councilmember Christina Henderson downplayed the arrest reports as 'a bunch of traffic stops' and said the administration is seeking to disguise how unnecessary the intervention is. 'I'm looking at this list of arrests, and they sound like a normal Saturday night in any big city,' Henderson said. ▶ Read more about the intervention Administration steps up sanctions against Cuban program sending doctors to developing countries Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced visa restrictions on an unspecified number of Cuban, Brazilian, Grenadan and other officials, including some in Africa and former employees of the Pan American Health Organization. Rubio said they are being targeted 'for their complicity in the Cuban regime's medical mission scheme in which medical professionals are 'rented' by other countries at high prices and most of the revenue is kept by the Cuban authorities.' None of the officials, except for two Brazilian health ministry employees, were named in the statements. Rubio accused them of being 'responsible for or involved in abetting the Cuban regime's coercive labor export scheme, which exploits Cuban medical workers through forced labor.' Rubio previously imposed similar sanctions on other officials after announcing the new policy to punish Cuba and countries that accept Cuban health care workers in February. Trump administration's lawsuit against all of Maryland's federal judges meets skepticism in court U.S. District Judge Thomas Cullen questioned why it was necessary for the administration to sue the state's entire federal bench over an order pausing the immediate deportation of migrants challenging their removals. Cullen did not issue a ruling following a hearing in Baltimore, but he expressed skepticism about the legal maneuver, which attorneys for the Maryland judges called completely unprecedented. All of Maryland's 15 federal judges are named as defendants in the suit, a highly unusual circumstance that reflects the administration's aggressive response to courts that slow or stop its policies. At issue in the lawsuit is a judicial order barring the administration from deporting any immigrants seeking review of their detention until 4 p.m. on the second business day after their habeas corpus petition is filed. The Justice Department says that impedes Trump's authority to enforce immigration laws. Attorneys for the Maryland judges counter that the suit aims to limit the power of the judiciary. Indiana Democrats warn they 'may be next in line' in redistricting fights Rep. Cherrish Pryor, a Democrat from Indiana, warned Wednesday that the Texas redistricting fight would have impacts far beyond the Lone Star state, saying 'while Texas is on the frontlines of this fight, Indiana may be next in line.' President Donald Trump has been pressuring Republican-run states, including Indiana, to redraw Congressional boundaries and dispatched Vice President JD Vance to the state this month to call for a new federal caucus. Rep. Ed DeLaney, from Indiana, decried Vance's visit to Indiana, telling the Associated Press it was 'insulting and embarrassing.' 'Never in my life did I think the vice president of the United States would come to my state and ask them to shoplift two districts,' he said. DeLaney also said he has seen potential drafts of redistricting maps for Indiana 'floating around' and said he sensed hesitancy about them from his Republican colleagues. There's always the risk, he said, that redistricting would backfire for the party that calls for it. 'If they have any brains, they'd look at this and ask 'How does this play out for me?'' He said. 'Every one of them won the district they have, and they won them fairly easily.' Texas Dems undecided on when to go home, celebrate national attention Rep. Jon Rosenthal, a Democrat from Houston, told the Associated Press they have not yet decided how long the Texas Democrats in Chicago will hold out before returning to Texas, calling it a 'complicated and emotional discussion.' Rosenthal said going home after the current special session ends Friday 'is definitely one of the options.' At a Wednesday news conference at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.. memorial on Chicago's South Side, Rosenthal and other Democrats from Texas and Indiana defined success for the walkout as building awareness for the redistricting fight in Texas rather than blocking the redrawn maps. 'They may still pass these maps, but we're going to do everything we can to awaken America,' said Rep. Gene Wu, a Democrat from Texas. Man arrested hurling sandwich at a federal law-enforcement official A man has been arrested on a charge that he hurled a sandwich at a federal law-enforcement official in the nation's capital amid a surge in law-enforcement patrols ordered by the White House, according to a court filing Wednesday. Sean Charles Dunn, 37, of Washington, D.C., approached a group of U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents late Sunday, pointed a finger in an agent's face and swore at him, calling him a 'fascist,' a police affidavit says. An observer's video captured Dunn throwing a sub-style sandwich at the agent's chest, the affidavit says. 'Why are you here? I don't want you in my city!' Dunn shouted, according to police. Dunn tried to run away but was arrested on a federal assault charge, police said. Online court records don't list an attorney for Dunn. The incident coincided with President Donald Trump's push to flood the city with National Guard troops and federal officers. Trump claims crime in the city has reached emergency levels, but city leaders point to statistics showing violent crime at a 30-year low. Trump-Putin meeting at Alaska military base offers security — and more President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin meeting at an American military base this week allows them to avoid any protests and provides an important level of security. That's according to Benjamin Jensen, senior fellow for defense and security at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank. 'For President Trump, it's a great way for him to show American military strength while also isolating the ability of the public or others to intervene with what he probably hopes is a productive dialogue,' Jensen said. He said the location means Trump can cultivate ties with Putin while 'signaling military power to try to gain that bargaining advantage to make a second meeting possible.' Treasury Secretary Bessent calls for a ban on members of Congress trading individual stocks 'It is the credibility of the House and the Senate,' Bessent said during an interview. 'It brings down trust in the system because, I can tell you, if any private citizen traded this way, the SEC would be knocking on their door.' Bessent's call makes him the latest federal official to call for some limits on congressional stock trading. Members of Congress have received mounting criticism in recent years for operating investment portfolios while serving in Congress. Insider trading by members of Congress is already illegal under the STOCK Act of 2012, though concerns over enforcement and the perception of bias persist among the public. Members of Congress have shown interest in imposing limits on their own stock trading. Senators on both sides of the aisle have introduced legislation that would limit federal officials and their families from managing the buying and selling of assets ranging from publicly traded stocks and bonds. Other lawmakers and government watchdogs have proposed bans on trading other financial assets, such as cryptocurrency and real estate. Former President Joe Biden in December called for a ban on congressional stock trading. The Associated Press

National Guard Ramps Up D.C. Presence as Trump Threatens to Extend Takeover
National Guard Ramps Up D.C. Presence as Trump Threatens to Extend Takeover

New York Times

time23 minutes ago

  • New York Times

National Guard Ramps Up D.C. Presence as Trump Threatens to Extend Takeover

Teams of federal agents and local police officers rolled out of the parking lot of a U.S. Park Police facility in Southeast Washington on Wednesday evening as President Trump's takeover of law enforcement in the nation's capital continued to ramp up. Scores of National Guard troops gathered on the lawn of the facility by a U.S. Marshals tent, and hundreds of official vehicles filled the parking lot and grass outside the facility in the Anacostia neighborhood. With 800 National Guard members and Washington's municipal police department, the Metropolitan Police, under his command, Mr. Trump, who announced the federal crackdown on crime in the capital on Monday, has vowed the city would be 'essentially crime-free' under his watch. In the next day or two, the D.C. National Guard will build up to about 100 to 200 soldiers out at any given time in support of federal law enforcement officials, Col. Dave Butler, an Army spokesman, said Wednesday. City officials have said the National Guard troops would not have the authority to make arrests. They began arriving on the streets Tuesday evening. Another 500 federal law enforcement agents would be deployed in the city, officials have said. Relatively few Guard troops could be seen on the streets of the city at 7:30 p.m., but a heavier presence was expected over the course of the night. Speaking at the Kennedy Center earlier Wednesday, Mr. Trump appeared to suggest that he could maintain oversight of crime-fighting in Washington beyond the 30 days that the law allows his administration to be in control of the Metropolitan Police. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Mexico says 26 alleged cartel figures sent to US were requested by Trump administration, not part of tariff talks
Mexico says 26 alleged cartel figures sent to US were requested by Trump administration, not part of tariff talks

CNN

time25 minutes ago

  • CNN

Mexico says 26 alleged cartel figures sent to US were requested by Trump administration, not part of tariff talks

Mexico sent 26 alleged cartel figures to face justice in the United States because the Trump administration requested them and Mexico did not want them to continue running their illicit businesses from Mexican prisons, officials said Wednesday. The mass transfer was not, however, part of wider negotiations as Mexico seeks to avoid higher tariffs threatened by US President Donald Trump, the officials said. 'These transfers are not only a strategic measure to ensure public safety, but also reflect a firm determination to prevent these criminals from continuing to operate from within prisons and to break up their networks of influence,' Mexican Security Minister Omar García Harfuch said in a news conference on Wednesday. The 26 prisoners handed over to American authorities on Tuesday included figures aligned with the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the Sinaloa Cartel among others. They were wanted by American authorities for their roles in drug trafficking and other crimes. It comes months after 29 other alleged cartel leaders were sent to the US in February. In the exchange, the US Justice Department promised it would not seek the death penalty against any of the 55 people included in the two transfers, which experts say may help avoid any violent outburst by the cartels in response. Authorities said the operation involved nearly a thousand law enforcement officers, 90 vehicles and a dozen military aircraft. Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said earlier Wednesday that the transfers were 'sovereign decisions,' but the move comes as the Mexican leader faces mounting pressure by the Trump administration to crack down on cartels and fentanyl production. García Harfuch also confirmed Wednesday that a US government drone – non-military – was flying over central Mexico, but at the request of Mexican authorities as part of an ongoing investigation. So far, Sheinbaum has tried to show the Trump administration a greater willingness to pursue the cartels than her predecessor – a change that has been acknowledged by US officials – and continued to slow migration to the US border, in an effort to avoid the worst of Trump's tariff threats. Two weeks ago, the two leaders spoke and agreed to give their teams another 90 days to negotiate to avoid threatened 30% tariffs on imports from Mexico. 'Little by little, Mexico is following through with this demand by the Americans to deliver drug capos,' said Mexican security analyst David Saucedo. 'It's buying (the Mexican government) time.' Saucedo said the Mexican government has been able to avoid a burst of violence by cartels – a reaction often seen when capos are captured – in part, because Ovidio Guzmán, a son of infamous capo Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán, showed it's possible to negotiate with US prosecutors. Ovidio Guzmán pleaded guilty last month to drug trafficking and other charges and hopes for a lighter sentence in exchange for his cooperation. But Saucedo warned that if such mass prisoner transfers continue, the Latin American country is bound to see another outburst of violence in the future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store