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Supreme Court won't enforce West Virginia law banning trans athletes from girls' teams

Becky Pepper-Jackson has presented as a girl since fourth grade. The 12-year-old is at the center of a legal dispute that is at the Supreme Court.
ACLU of West Virginia
Becky Pepper-Jackson has presented as a girl since fourth grade. The 12-year-old is at the center of a legal dispute that is at the Supreme Court.

Updated April 6, 2023 at 2:39 PM ET

The U.S. Supreme Court refused Thursday to intervene in an ongoing case involving West Virginia's law banning transgender girls from participating in girls' sports teams at school. Conservative Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas dissented.

The court's action came on its emergency docket, sometimes dubbed the shadow docket because decisions are made without full briefing or argument, and decided with little or no explanation.

While the court's conservative supermajority has come under considerable criticism for its aggressive use of the emergency docket to deal with controversial issues without full briefing and oral argument, this time the court stayed its hand.

Some 19 states have enacted laws like West Virginia's in the last three years, according to the ACLU. But no appeals court has yet ruled on the question.

In this case, West Virginia's law was challenged by a 12-year-old middle school transgender girl named Becky Pepper-Jackson, who has lived as a girl since fourth grade, according to court papers. Briefs in her case say she is now receiving "puberty-delaying treatment and estrogen hormone therapy," so she "has not experienced and will not experience endogenous puberty." That means she will not experience any of the physiological characteristics of puberty experienced by typical boys, and will instead develop "physiological characteristics consistent with hormonal puberty of typical girls."

According to her lawyers, she has been on the girls' track and field teams for the past three, going on four, sports seasons, "harming no one." Indeed, her lawyers say she was "welcomed by teammates and coaches" and "has not had any problems with children on other schools' teams."

Becky's lawyers brought what is called an "as applied" challenge to the West Virginia law as it affects her. So far, she is the only transgender girl identified by either side as wanting to play on a girls team. Nonetheless, federal District Court Judge Joseph Goodwin, after initially blocking the law, allowed it to go into effect after full briefing in the case.

"While some females may be able to outperform some males, it is generally accepted that, on average, males outperform females athletically because of inherent physical differences between the sexes," he wrote. "This is not an overbroad generalization, but rather a general principle that realistically reflects the average physical differences between the sexes."

The ACLU, Lambda Legal and private lawyers representing Becky and her mother appealed the ruling and won a preliminary order from the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that precludes the law being enforced while the appellate court considers her case.

That temporary order from the appeals court prompted West Virginia's attorney general to go to the Supreme Court, seeking emergency relief.

"For as long as schools have offered sports teams, it has been the 'norm' to designate student athletes to them by sex," the state said. Without separation of the sexes in sports, "there is a substantial risk that boys would dominate the girls programs and deny them an equal opportunity to compete in interscholastic events."

The state defended its ban on transgender participation in sports, contending that "biological differences between males and females matter in sports." Separating teams by sex assigned at birth violates neither the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee to equal protection of the law nor federal anti-discrimination law, the state said.

The federal law, known as Title IX, is likely a trickier question for the state because the federal statute prohibits sex-based discrimination in any school or education program that receives funding from the federal government; the law was modeled on an earlier federal law banning discrimination in employment, and the Supreme Court ruled just three years ago that the ban on sex-based discrimination in employment applies to transgender employees.

Becky's lawyers contended that no emergency exists requiring the Supreme Court to intervene in this case before the Court of Appeals rules.

It "is telling that the defendants in this litigation closest to [Becky's] actual participation—the Harrison County School Board and Superintendent—have not sought this Court's emergency intervention, and have 'stipulated' ... that [her] participation in girls track and field did not cause 'any disruption,'" the ACLU said in its brief.

Finally, her lawyers argued that the state "should not be allowed to use the [Supreme Court's] emergency docket to force the court" to give a "preview" of its views, when no appeals court has yet addressed this issue, and on a "short fuse without benefit of full briefing and oral argument."

The dissent filed by Justices Alito and Thomas was tepid in tone, and based largely on the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals general practice of not explaining orders pending appeal.

"Among other things, enforcement of the law at issue should not be forbidden by the federal courts without any explanation," Justice Alito wrote in his dissent, adding: In "the circumstances present here—where a divided panel of a lower court has enjoined a duly enacted state law on an important subject without a word of explanation, notwithstanding that the District Court granted summary judgment to the State based on a fact-intensive record—the State is entitled to relief."

In a related development Thursday, the U.S. Education Department announced a proposed change to Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in federally funded education programs. The proposal would make it illegal for schools to broadly ban transgender students from sports teams that align with their gender identity, rather than their assigned sex at birth.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Nina Totenberg is NPR's award-winning legal affairs correspondent. Her reports air regularly on NPR's critically acclaimed newsmagazines All Things Considered, Morning Edition, and Weekend Edition.
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