
Minnesota AG says state lawsuit against Trump administration aims to protect trans youth
Ellison on Tuesday provided details of the lawsuit in a noon news conference at the State Capitol.
CBS News Minnesota
will be streaming a replay of his remarks at 12:30 p.m. Watch in the live player above.
According to Ellison, the lawsuit is an attempt to prevent the U.S. Department of Justice from filing a civil lawsuit against the Minnesota Department of Education.
Last week, the
DOJ sued Maine's education department
for "discriminating against women by failing to protect women in women's sports" in what U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi alleged is a violation of Title IX.
"The Department of Justice will not sit by when women are discriminated against in sports," Bondi said. "This is about sports, this is also about these young women's personal safety."
The federal government said in its lawsuit filed in Maine's federal court that the state's Department of Education is "openly and defiantly flouting anti-discrimination law by enforcing policies that require girls to compete against boys in athletic competitions designated exclusively for girls," arguing that the practice violates Title IX's "core protections." It cited three examples of boys participating in girls' sports.
Bondi added that the DOJ's actions in Maine could be followed by moves in other states, including Minnesota.
"We're looking at Minnesota, we're looking at California," Bondi said. "We're looking at many, many states, but they are the top two that should be on notice."
Bondi
previously sent letters
to Ellison and Erich Martens, director of the Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL), warning them "Minnesota should be on notice," and her department "will hold accountable states and state entities that violate federal law."
In February, President Trump
signed an executive order
banning transgender girls and women from competing on
sports teams
that match their gender identity. In that order, Trump mandated that Title IX be interpreted as prohibiting transgender girls and women from participating in female sports. Title IX is a federal law that bans sex discrimination in schools.
Ellison announced the president's ban was
in violation of the Minnesota Human Rights Act
after the MSHSL turned to his office for legal opinion following its announcement on Feb. 7 that
it wouldn't comply with the order
, citing the state law.
While testifying before the U.S. Congress in December 2024, NCAA President Charlie Baker said he was aware of "less than 10" transgender athletes among the more than half a million student-athletes governed by the organization.
This story will be updated.
Jacob Rosen
and
Kaia Hubbard
contributed to this report.

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Fox News
3 hours ago
- Fox News
White House makes statement after Brooke Slusser comes forward with SJSU volleyball allegations
EXCLUSIVE: The White House provided an exclusive statement to Fox News Digital after former San Jose State volleyball player Brooke Slusser came forward with allegations related to her final college volleyball season in 2024 — a season that involved a transgender teammate being investigated for allegedly conspiring to have Slusser harmed during a game. "Women deserve to play sports without fear of being violated and harassed by biological men. President Trump is returning integrity to women's sports by ending the deranged left's policies that demean and endanger women," White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers told Fox News Digital. The statement came after an inquiry into a response to Fox News Digital's reporting on a Mountain West Conference investigation into allegations that former SJSU trans athlete Blaire Fleming conspired with a Colorado State player to have Slusser spiked in the face during an Oct. 3 match. President Donald Trump's Department of Education opened a federal Title IX investigation into San Jose State in February over the situation involving Fleming and the university's handling of the trans athlete. Slusser issued a response to the White House statement. "I love the steps the White House has taken to eliminate men in women's sports, but as of now, there is so much change that still needs to be made. We have seen baby steps in the right direction, but we still have girls out there having to deal with men on their teams and in their locker rooms," Slusser said. "I feel this needs to be a massive priority so we can stop this madness sooner rather than later. Girls are still suffering every day until we can put a complete stop to these people's false reality and put them where they belong, which is with men's sports." Slusser previously alleged in a lawsuit, signed by 10 other current or former women's college volleyball players against the Mountain West and representatives of SJSU, that Fleming and other teammates snuck out of the team hotel the night before an Oct. 3 game against Colorado State and met with an opposing player. The lawsuit alleged a teammate who snuck out with Fleming later told players and coaches of an alleged plan by Fleming, in a conspiracy with the Colorado State player, to have Slusser spiked in the face during a match. The lawsuit and complaint alleged the players who snuck out told other players and coaches they saw Fleming also hand over an SJSU scouting report with an agreement to throw the match in Colorado State's favor. In November, the Mountain West Conference launched an investigation into the allegations but concluded "sufficient evidence" could not be found. Slusser now claims she had a conversation with a teammate who was interviewed as part of the conference's investigation into Fleming's alleged plan. Fox News Digital is not disclosing the identity of the teammate. "Based on what I was told, exactly what one of my teammates had seen go on that night — about talking about the scouting report and leaving the net open — was told to those lawyers. So, that should have been sufficient evidence [of the alleged plan by Fleming]," Slusser told Fox News Digital, adding she wants to see the investigation reopened. "People are telling you this happened, and it's not second-hand information. She sat there and heard the conversation between Blaire and [former Colorado State volleyball player] Malaya [Jones]. So, to me, just from what I know without even having to dig deep into this investigation, there is sufficient evidence, and they were told sufficient evidence." Fox News Digital cannot independently verify that Slusser's teammate corroborated the allegations against Fleming when speaking to investigators. Slusser has alleged university officials hid knowledge of Fleming's birth sex from her while allegedly frequently pairing the two in the same bedroom on overnight trips. "I'm openly changing in front of this person, thinking that it's a woman, and … I could have had the chance to take myself out of that situation and at least go to a different room and request to be switched to another room and didn't," she said. "So, I got that opportunity of my choice to be taken away from me." Slusser said after she joined Riley Gaines' lawsuit against the NCAA in September, citing her experience with Fleming, interactions with trans athletes quickly turned hostile. "After I joined the lawsuit, Blaire did not like me whatsoever. There was a time where Blaire said, 'I never want to speak to you again.' And I said, 'OK, that's fine,'" Slusser said. "I just knew there was hatred toward me from Blaire." Fox News Digital interviewed San Jose State athletic director Jeff Konya to inquire about Slusser's claims and other details of the investigation. However, Konya stood up after just around five minutes of related questions and walked away, saying "I'm done." Fox News Digital played a video clip of Slusser reciting these allegations to Konya at Mountain West media days July 15. "I have no idea if she's telling the truth or not," Konya said of Slusser's claims. Konya could not confirm or deny whether any of the witnesses interviewed corroborated the allegations against Fleming. When asked if he was satisfied with how the university handled the controversy involving Fleming in 2024, Konya said, "I think everybody acted in the best possible way they could, given the circumstances." Slusser made an attempt to return to play one season of beach volleyball in the NCAA, which she had a year of eligibility for, entering the transfer portal this past spring around the time of her graduation from SJSU. However, after communicating with several Division I coaches about potential offers, she pulled herself out of the transfer portal and abandoned the idea. Slusser cited concern about her well-being and potential retaliation for her beliefs and public profile, citing her experience with SJSU, Fleming and the controversial investigation into the trans athlete's alleged plan to harm her. "I could have gotten there and could have had a lot of retaliation from just students or staff or the athletes even, and I didn't know if that was something I could handle going through again," Slusser said, adding she had no faith "at all" she would be protected in the event of retaliation. "I was never shown that at an institution I thought I could trust … so I could really trust no one. … There was a lot of fears going through that transfer process." Education Secretary Linda McMahon previously told Fox News Digital that the Trump Education Department will continue working to address the SJSU investigation. "Our investigation will continue," McMahon said. Fox News Digital has reached out to the Mountain West, Willkie Farr & Gallagher, San Jose State University, Kress, Colorado State University and Jones' current school, Southern Methodist University (SMU), for a response to all reported findings and the allegations by the Slusser family and Batie-Smoose. Jones transferred to SMU after the end of last season. When asked if Mountain West would disclose any evidence from the investigation, particularly if any of the witnesses interviewed corroborated the allegations against Fleming, the conference declined. "With litigation ongoing, the Mountain West will have no further comment," a conference spokesperson said. San Jose State has declined to respond to Slusser's claims as well. "Due to ongoing litigation and federal investigation, we are unable to respond to your inquiry," a university spokesperson told Fox News Digital. Fox News Digital has attempted to reach Fleming via social media for comment.


Chicago Tribune
4 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Letters: A moderate Republican's thoughts on the immigrant crackdown
President Donald Trump and his immigration czar have directed that all immigrants who are in the country illegally be rounded up like cattle and deported. My grandmother would have called it 'tossing the baby out with the bathwater,' while I call it 'government without brains.' The Tribune's story ('Immigration crackdown felt in Chicago's suburbs,' July 27) about a 17-year employee being fired by Nestle Corp. for not having proof of citizenship and Tribune coverage of many law-abiding contributors to our society being arrested and deported for noncitizen status are reporting on an abomination. Many states recognize common-law marriage in which a couple living as husband and wife for a lengthy period of time confers legal marital status. There are states that confer ownership of property after many years of a steward ably working the land. As a country, we recognize statutes of limitations dictate whether criminal charges can be brought after a lengthy period of time. Why is it so hard to apply some intellectual honesty and informed judgment for noncitizens who behave responsibly and demonstrate a work ethic that is indicative of the American Dream? Undocumented immigrants who work hard to provide for and raise their families should not be treated worse than we treat actual criminals. I am a moderate Republican who is disgusted with the hypocrisy and 'one-size-fits-all' of the Trump administration. Congress and Trump should not be surprised when I and my like-minded friends and family hold our collective noses and vote for whoever is running against the Republicans in future to the always-erudite Jonathan Zimmerman for extolling the virtues of intellectual and viewpoint diversity ('Why higher education needs diversity in viewpoints,' July 25) at the country's so-called institutions of higher learning, including Ivy League universities such as Harvard (and, while unmentioned, his own University of Pennsylvania) while still decrying the Donald Trump administration's efforts to prod institutions in that direction. The professor may be correct in saying that the government cannot constitutionally compel universities to promote such diversity of thought, but I think he misses two important practical points. The first is that private universities in particular — such as Harvard and Penn — also have no constitutional claim to the federal tax dollars on which they have long relied in shockingly massive amounts to support an essentially medieval guild system, the increasing cost of which for decades has far exceeded the rate of inflation of most other goods and services. And he who pays the piper calls the tune, just as the Barack Obama administration did with its infamous 'dear colleague' Title IX letter some years back. The second is that without the Trump administration's overly aggressive prodding, American institutions of higher education would have had no incentive to change their one-sided ideological bias at the teaching and research levels. The leftist bias of faculties and administrators is well documented, and Zimmerman cites striking examples, but let me add one. 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A recording invited me to hold on to be transferred into a town hall meeting, where I could have my questions answered, but I had my meeting commitment. The next day, I tried to send a message to LaHood through his website, but after entering everything, I found out it was not functioning. The next day, the congressman posted on his Facebook page that one of the most important parts of his job is hearing directly from his constituents and that he had 52,000 people on that call! I'm sure LaHood is getting ready to run for either the Senate or governor since he now posts almost daily on Facebook with very safe pieces about how in touch he is, but a robocall town hall with 52,000 people doesn't even come close to counting. I have so many questions about why he and the rest of the Republican Congress have almost totally abdicated to the president their responsibility to govern, what his thoughts are on several key issues and if he is personally OK with an increasing number of the president's actions. If he runs for higher office, he won't be able to hide in his safely gerrymandered district and will have to let us know where he actually stands on some real issues that a significant percentage of us believe are going in a very wrong thoughts are with Northwestern University, my alma mater and former employer, and all the current employees affected by these cuts. I can't help but ask: 'For what?' The horrific acts of Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, to slaughter so many innocents in Israel initiated worldwide debate and demonstrations. As the response from Israel made many ask about the equally horrific impact and death of innocents in Gaza, those debates and demonstrations heightened, particularly on college campuses globally. Certainly, there were excesses of speech and actions on both sides of the debate and demonstrations for a period of time. However, how are the actions of the Donald Trump administration, under the guise of addressing antisemitism on U.S. college campuses, in any way in equal measure to those excesses? Slashing billions in university funding because of the use of free speech, no matter how uncomfortable? When overwhelmingly these demonstrations were peaceful, even if they were loud and uncomfortable? Even when cases of violence and abuse at these demonstrations were addressed by law enforcement and campus administrators using principles of the rule of law and judicial process? And particular to NU, even when opposing parties, including the Jewish NU community, came to a mutually negotiated resolution to the demonstrations on campus? The overreach of the Trump administration in this matter is too much. No one voted for this. This is wrong.I read that hundreds of government employees were diverted from their responsibilities to read the 100,000 pages of Jeffrey Epstein files four times, looking for red flags. Wouldn't it have been more cost-effective to simply release them and let the public and journalists do that work for free?My family makes regular use of the Chicago Public Library, and I write with deep concern over the federal government's decision to eliminate funding for the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS). This action will have a direct and devastating impact on libraries across the country, including our own here in Rogers Park. In fiscal year 2025, Illinois received $5.7 million through the IMLS Grants to States program, placing it among the top recipients nationally. These funds have a broad impact on statewide services, individual library grants, and library operations and programs. In light of the government shutdown of IMLS, it's more important than ever to stand together for libraries and the vital role as public spaces — this especially in a time and climate in which isolation and fragmentation have done so much damage to community, decency and public goodwill.

Epoch Times
4 hours ago
- Epoch Times
DOJ Supports Congressman's Supreme Court Challenge to Late Counting of Ballots
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