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A federal judge rejected legal action by three softcutors from the Minnesota high school students who had to compete with a organic transgender launcher.
The trial was filed by three anonymous female athletes against the Attorney General of Minnesota, Keith Ellison, the executive director of the Minnesota State High School, Erich Martens, the Minnesota commissioner of the Human Rights Department Rebecca Lucero and the education commissioner of Minnesota Willie Jett.
The case was expelled on September 19 by the American district judge Eric Tostrud, who was appointed by President Donald Trump in 2018.
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Champlin Park celebrates the victory of the state championship while Bloomington Jefferson looks. (Amber Harding)
One of the complainants told PK Press Club Digital that the dismissal was “overwhelming” and “frustrating”.
“It’s so overwhelming. Honestly, I don’t think it’s just that it happens. I really hoped that the court would immediately order it, and now it’s super frustrating, not only for people affected now, but for all the girls that it could affect,” she said.
Another applicant also called the “frustrating” decision and said: “It’s not fair”.
Tostrud’s decision indicates that the lawyers of the complainants have “not shown as a factual question according to which the disparities created by the statutes are substantial enough to refuse its members effective housing” or “equal treatment”, because these concepts are defined under title IX. “”
The transgender athlete, Marissa Rothenberger of Champlin Park High School, led the school to a state championship last year while dominating female adversaries.
Rothenberger launched a complete laundering, granting only three strokes and withdrawing six in the championship match, capping a race which saw Rothenberger launch the 21 heats through three games of the state tournament, abandoning only two points.
The junior only granted two points out of 35 rounds in total in the playoffs.
Follow -up of sports controversies at the TRANS athlete high school while trembling the nation in the past year

Marissa Rothenberger celebrated in the canoe with teammates after the dramatic victory of Champlin Park. (Amber Harding)
One of the complainants previously told PK Press Club Digital that it was to play against Rothenberger.
“To face him is not only a physical challenge, but also a mental. It is a mental battle knowing that he has an advantage in the sport that I grew up playing, which makes it difficult to want to strike against him,” said the player.
“Its ability to go out and run the ball is a strong advantage, but, as I said, it is also incredibly mentally difficult to know that you are in competition against someone who has unfair advantages that leave you little or no confidence.
“This problem affected me in a way that I would never have imagined. It is simply unfair, and I hate that nothing happens to change this. The boys should not be able to take place of girls in the teams simply because they are able to do it. I hope that more girls affected by this problem will be summed up against this.”
After President Trump signed the executive decree of “men to keep the men of women’s sport, the Minnesota State High School League announced it would challenge federal law by allowing transgender athletes to continue playing in female sports. Ellison then said at a press conference on April 22 that he had received an opinion from the Ministry of Justice threatening legal action if the State had not followed the decree, then the Attorney General decided to continue.
The American Department of Education announced in June That his two current surveys on Minnesota on the issue, that which was launched in February and that which was launched on June 3, would be raised to the investigation team on title IX newly formed.

Transgender launcher Marissa Rothenberger (Amber Harding)
“The Trump administration has a duty to protect women and girls and respect federal civil rights, and I am happy to associate myself with the prosecutor General Pam Bondi to raise the department’s investigations to Minnesota to the team of special IX surveys,” said US Secretary for Education Linda McMahon in the announcement.
“The continuous indifference of minnesota to the civil rights of women is completely unacceptable. We must make sure that women and girls are not stripped of their distinctions hard won or subject to the danger and the indignity of unfair competitions, and we will fight to restore the anti -discriminatory protections under title IX to the most complete extent of the law.”