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A Long Island county that has moved to prevent transgender women and girls from taking part in sports teams consistent with their gender identity has sued state Attorney General Letitia James after she urged the county to rescind its executive order.
The lawsuit, filed by Nassau County in federal court on Tuesday, marks a major escalation in a public battle between the countyβs Republican executive, Bruce Blakeman, and the Democratic state attorney general over the transgender sports ban.
Last week, James issued a statement threatening legal action against the county over the order, declaring it βtransphobic and blatantly illegalβ and instructing Blakeman to βimmediately rescindβ it. Her office also penned a cease-and-desist letter to Nassau County.
But before James went to court, Blakeman sent the first legal shot, filing a 12-page lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York that said Jamesβ cease-and-desist letter βviolates the constitutional rights of biologically girls and women who are a federally recognized protected class.β
The complaint cited the U.S. Constitutionβs 14th Amendment guarantee of equal protection, and argued the order conferred protections to women and girls seeking fairness in athletics. The reach of Blakemanβs order would be limited to county-run facilities.
The complaint seeks a declaratory judgement asserting that the county order is legal.
In a statement responding to the lawsuit, Jamesβ office said: βOur laws protect New Yorkers from discrimination, and the Office of the Attorney General is committed to upholding those laws and protecting our communities.β
βThis is not up for debate: the executive order is illegal, and it will not stand in New York,β said the statement.
Because Jamesβ actions had been limited to a cease-and-desist letter and a press statement, it was unclear if Blakemanβs complaint had presented a controversy demanding intervention by the courts, said John Q. Barrett, a constitutional law professor at St. Johnβs University.
βThe jurisdiction of the court begins with actual cases and controversies,β Barrett said. βThis complaint may be more in the nature of a press release or a political position than a serious commencement of litigation.β
A plaintiff in the lawsuit is the father of a female 16-year-old volleyball player who, the complaint claimed, could be subject to βrisk of injury by a transgender girlβ if transgender females are allowed to participate in girls youth sports.
When Blakeman announced the ban two weeks ago, he could not cite for reporters any examples of transgender women or girls creating competitive disadvantages in athletics on Long Island.
Blakeman said the county wanted to βget ahead of the curve.β
Gov. Hochul, a Democrat, issued a statement last month saying that Blakeman was seeking to βscore cheap political points by putting a target on the backs of some of our stateβs most vulnerable children.β
Barrett said the lack of concrete examples of harm in Nassau Countyβs lawsuit could hinder it by raising a question of legal standing.
βAll of this is pretty abstract, and that kind of imaginary non-actual, non-concrete injury interest is usually a constitutional problem,β Barrett said. βItβs usually a basis for a court to conclude: We donβt have judicial power here.β
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