Transgender Mississippi girl misses graduation after judge's ruling

by Reuters
Tuesday, 23 May 2023 08:14 GMT

Protesters rally for the International Transgender Day of Visibility in Tucson, Arizona, U.S., March 31, 2023. REUTERS/Rebecca Noble

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A transgender Mississippi girl declined to participate in high school graduation on Saturday after a judge said the school district could bar her unless she dressed in clothes required for boys

May 20 (Reuters) - A transgender Mississippi girl declined to participate in high school graduation on Saturday after a U.S. District Judge said the school district could bar her unless she dressed in clothes required for boys, a lawyer for the girl said.

U.S. District Judge Taylor McNeel, an appointee of former Republican President Donald Trump, said in filing late on Friday after a hearing that he would not stop the Harrison County School District from barring the 17-year-old girl, local media reported. The girl was listed as L.B. in court papers.

"Our client is being shamed and humiliated for explicitly discriminatory reasons, and her family is being denied a once-in-a-lifetime milestone in their daughter's life," Linda Morris, a staff attorney for the American Civil Liberty Union (ACLU) Women's Rights Project, said in an email.

"No one should be forced to miss their graduation because of their gender."

The ACLU sued the school district this week, on behalf of L.B., saying that it informed her she should could not attend the ceremony while wearing a dress and heeled shoes, the Mississippi Free Press said in a report. The school district's dress code requires boys to wear a white button-down shirt, black dress plants, black shoes and a tie or bowtie.

Mississippi lawmakers have introduced more than 30 bills this year seeking to limit rights of LGBTQ citizens. In 2021, Mississippi became the first U.S. state to ban transgender athletes from competing in women's and girl's sports, when Republican Governor Tate Reeves signed legislation.

The Harrison County School Board attorney Wynn Clark said in court papers that participating in a graduation was voluntary and not a constitutionally protected right, the Associated Press reported.

Efforts to reach the school district and Clark on Saturday were unsuccessful.

Reporting by Timothy Gardner Editing by Nick Zieminski
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