
Group files federal complaint over Deerfield transgender student using locker room
The incident previously gained national attention after the mother of one of the students, Nicole Georgas, went on Fox News to criticize the district over the alleged incident. She also spoke during a school board meeting to demand that locker rooms and bathrooms be designated for either biological males or biological females, arguing there is 'already a gender-neutral option.'
In a previous statement, the district said students are not required to change into gym clothes in front of others in locker rooms and have 'multiple options to change in a private location if they wish.'
The district said its policies and procedures, including those related to students' use of locker rooms, are in line with state laws, the Illinois School Code and guidance from the Illinois State Board of Education.
'District 109 is committed to providing a learning environment where all students and staff are respected and supported,' the statement said.
Conservative nonprofit America First Legal (AFL) announced Tuesday it had filed a complaint with the criminal section of the DOJ's Civil Rights Division, urging it to conduct a criminal investigation into District 109 and its administrators over the alleged incident.
A DOJ spokesman declined comment, but a department source with knowledge of the complaint confirmed it was submitted. Attempts to reach the Illinois State Board of Education for comment were unsuccessful.
AFL claims the district violated Title IX and President Donald Trump's Executive Order 14168, called 'Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government.' AFL was founded in 2021 by Stephen Miller, a senior Trump advisor.
According to AFL's allegations, the district's policy of allowing the transgender student to use the girls' bathroom and locker room led to a protest by a group of teenage girls who refused to change for gym class.
AFL claims school administrators 'admonished (the students), and threatened them with discipline for 'misgendering' the boy and refusing to change for PE.'
'Shockingly, the school administrators, including the superintendent of student services, and the assistant principal, entered the girls' locker room and used their authority to intimidate the girls into changing in front of the boy,' the AFL said.
In the release, Ian Prior, an AFL senior counsel, claimed the students' 'First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights' had been 'sacrificed at the altar of radical transgender madness and the woke government bureaucrats that view the Constitution as nothing more than toilet paper' and district officials 'should face the long arm of our Justice Department.'
Protestors on both sides of the controversy were expected at Thursday evening's school board meeting, with Moms For Liberty Lake County and several LGBTQ organizations expected to advocate for support.
Kristal Larson, who is the executive director of the LGBTQ+ Center Lake County, Avon Township's clerk and a transgender woman, said during a transgender visibility event last month that there is 'a lot of anger' and 'concern' over what has been happening in Deerfield.
'There's fear that other schools may be targeted in the same way, and that Lake County can become unsafe,' Larson said.
But the controversy over the unidentified transgender student's bathroom and locker room use goes far beyond Lake County's, and even the state's, borders, Larson added, saying the transgender community has been a target of the new presidential administration.
Executive orders from the Trump administration seek to stop transgender, nonbinary and intersex people from changing their gender markers on passports or serving in the military, force transgender women in federal prisons to be housed with men and bar them from participation in female sports.
The orders also attempt to end gender-affirming care for transgender people younger than 19, and prohibit federal spending on the promotion of 'gender ideology.'
'Across the country, ideologues who deny the biological reality of sex have increasingly used legal and other socially coercive means to permit men to self-identify as women and gain access to intimate single-sex spaces and activities designed for women, from women's domestic abuse shelters to women's workplace showers,' Trump wrote in an executive order.
The Deerfield controversy has attracted attention from unusual places. Last month, District 109 put out a statement saying it was aware members of the community had received communications asking them to complete a survey about Deerfield schools, which they clarified were not from the district. In the statement, the district said it was not aware of who was distributing the survey.
In late March, Dave Nayak, a Chicago-area politician and former Democrat who unsuccessfully ran for the District 20 seat and said he had turned on the 'radical left,' announced he had commissioned a survey from conservative pollster group M3 about the district's transgender policies, ultimately calling for the district to change its policies.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Onion
33 minutes ago
- The Onion
What's In Trump's Big Beautiful Bill
President Donald Trump's budget megabill is in the House of Representatives after being narrowly passed by the Senate. Here are the key items in 'The One Big Beautiful Bill Act.' Funding for something called 'The Facility.' Smaller, phone booth–sized detention boxes on every American street corner. Coupon for 'buy two get one free' 12-packs of Coca-Cola products at ShopRite. A few new mean nicknames for Jeb Bush. A map of California inside a red circle with a cross through it. A glossy centerfold photo of a hot woman who is about to lose her health insurance. The end of treatment for those currently receiving CPR. Sen. Lisa Murkowski's world-famous moose tracks ice cream recipe. Moderate cuts to Medicaid compared to what's coming.


Bloomberg
36 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
BRICS Aspires to Occupy Global Ground Vacated by US Under Trump
Ever since BRICS was founded more than a decade ago, the group of emerging-market nations has struggled to identify a common purpose. President Donald Trump's tariffs may have solved that problem. BRICS leaders meeting in Rio de Janeiro this weekend for a summit hosted by Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva are expected to sign up to a joint statement decrying 'the rise of unjustified unilateral protectionist measures' and the 'indiscriminate raising' of tariffs. That's what foreign ministers from the bloc named for oldest members Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa agreed to in April, and several officials said the text would remain in the communique.


Entrepreneur
38 minutes ago
- Entrepreneur
How the 'Big, Beautiful Bill' Could Affect Small Businesses
President Donald Trump's "Big, Beautiful Bill" is set to be voted on in the House on Thursday ahead of the President's July 4 deadline to pass the bill. (There's even a Domino's Pizza-style tracker on the White House website — "We are preparing your tax cuts..." it reads.) The 887-page bill includes tax and spending cuts that will affect small businesses. Related: Big Government Changes Are Coming for Small Businesses — What You Need to Know On Fox News' "Mornings With Maria" on Wednesday, CPA and small business owner Gene Marks said the big winners of the bill "are small businesses." "I think that's going to have an enormous impact on the growth of businesses in this country," Marks said. "There are certain tax provisions in this bill, investing in capital equipment, spending on research and development, [increasing] the exemption for estate taxes, [and] they've all been made permanent, which means that small businesses can make long-term decisions about investing in their businesses, selling their businesses, or passing it on to new generations knowing that the laws aren't going to change." Ahead of the bill becoming law, here are some key items affecting businesses big and small: Corporations The tax breaks from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would be permanent when the bill passes, which allows businesses to write off the costs of research and development. When the Ways and Means Committee voted to make the 2017 cuts permanent, they said that the provisions "will provide small businesses, manufacturers, and farmers the certainty and confidence to fuel a second Trump economic boom through new investment and job creation." "Families and workers will save money from lower tax rates, a larger Child Tax Credit, and President Trump's tax priorities for hardworking Americans: tax relief for seniors, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime pay, and no tax on auto loan interest for American-made cars," the committee wrote on its website in May. Building and construction Businesses would be able to deduct the cost of building new manufacturing facilities in full and at a much faster rate. According to Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC), which represents 23,000 members and "millions" of construction workers, its website says, the legislation includes several tax provisions that will "directly benefit contractors." "Tax certainty and pro-growth policies are not abstract policy goals for construction businesses—they are the foundation that allows ABC members to invest, grow, and keep America building," said Kristen Swearingen, ABC vice president of government affairs. Franchises The bill is backed by the International Franchise Association (IFA). President and CEO Matt Haller told Entrepreneur in June that the tax provisions in the bill "will have a hugely positive impact on America's 830,000 franchise small business owners and their nine million employees." Related: Here's What the 'One, Big, Beautiful Bill' Means for the Franchise Industry "IFA, our member brands and franchise owners have been laser-focused on ensuring permanent tax relief," Haller said. "IFA thanks President Trump for putting the importance of protecting franchise small business owners front and center, and lawmakers for their work to get this bill across the finish line." Eliminates tax on tips In occupations where workers receive tips (restaurants, bars, beauty services, etc.), earned tips will no longer be taxed as taxable income. There are a few caveats, though: The provision expires in 2028, and the deduction is capped at $25,000. The exemption only applies to federal income tax, meaning state and local income and payroll taxes would not apply. Also, in the new Senate version of the bill, workers earning $150,000 or more a year ($300,000 for joint filers) are exempt. No tax on overtime White House estimates suggest that employees who work overtime hours would save up to $2,000 in taxes yearly with the bill. "Exempting overtime pay from federal income tax delivers direct, meaningful relief to the hardworking men and women of the construction trades, rewarding long hours on the jobsite," the Associated Builders and Contractors said in a statement. However, the AP reports that the bill does not eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits. Interest deductions If approved, the bill suggests that instead of calculating with EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes), deductions should be calculated using EBITDA (adds depreciation and amortization), which, the White House says, would allow businesses and franchises to deduct billions more in expenses. State and local taxes (SALT) deductions If the bill passes, the cap on the federal deduction for state and local taxes (SALT) will increase from $10,000 to $40,000 starting in 2025. According to the Tax Foundation, this will mainly benefit high earners.