Breaking Thursday, a group of female athletes sued the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) for permitting male intrusion into their sex-specific sports and private spaces. Independent Council on Women’s Sports is leading the lawsuit which accuses the NCAA and Georgia Tech — the site of the 2022 NCAA Swimming Championships, where male University Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas won the 500 meter freestyle — of knowingly violating Title IX, reports National Review.
Title IX is a federal statute which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in educational institutions that receive federal funding. The lawsuit, first reported by the Free Press, demands that males be disqualified from participating in women’s sports. It asks the NCAA to rescind awards given to trans athletes in women’s competitions and to “reassign” them to the female players who lost trophies and titles to the men. The lawsuit also asks for damages “for pain and suffering, mental and emotional distress, suffering and anxiety, expense costs and other damages due to defendants’ wrongful conduct.”
The female plaintiffs represent swimming programs at colleges such as NC State Swimming, Roanoke College Women’s Swimming, VA Tech Swimming and Diving, and University of KY Swimming and Diving, reports National Review, which writes:
Among the plaintiffs are prominent women’s sports advocates such as Riley Gaines, who tied with Thomas in the women’s 200-meter race at the NCAA tournament in March 2022. Kaitlynn Wheeler, who swam for the University of Kentucky alongside Gaines, is another plaintiff. Wheeler alleges in the suit that she and her teammates were forced into an extremely uncomfortable situation with having to change into their swimsuits in front of Thomas in the women’s locker room.
“While you’re doing this, you’re exposed,” Wheeler said in the suit. “You can’t stand there and hold a towel around you while putting the suit on at the same time.” Alons said “I was literally racing U.S. and Olympic gold medalists and I was changing in a storage closet at this elite-level meet…I just felt that my privacy and safety were being violated in the locker room.”
An anonymous plaintiff also recalled rushing off to change in a bathroom stall after confronting a “naked Thomas 10 feet in front of her and a full frontal view of Thomas’s genitalia” in the locker room, according to the lawsuit.