News

Judge Gives DOJ Access to Maine Sports Rosters, But Not List of Transgender Athletes

Judge Gives DOJ Access to Maine Sports Rosters, But Not List of Transgender Athletes

Photo: 560 WGAN Newsradio


A judge is limiting the information the Maine Principals’ Association must turn over in the federal government’s lawsuit against transgender athletes in girls’ sports.

The judge is granting the federal government’s request for rosters of all athletes in school sports, but is denying access to “lists of all known” transgender athletes.

The Maine Principals’ Association governs interscholastic sports in Maine and had objected to the federal requests as overburdening.

The Trump administration is suing Maine, claiming the state is violating federal discrimination law (Title IX) by allowing transgender athletes to compete in girls’ sports.

The Principals’ Association, along with an intervening party, Portland Public Schools, claimed the information sought was irrelevant, disproportionate, and burdensome, and protected under privacy laws.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Karen Frink Wolf ruled Tuesday that the government may have access to rosters from the 2023-24 and 2024-25 school years showing student participation.

“While I am unsure exactly what the Government hopes to glean from the rosters, I accept that the rosters are broadly relevant,” Judge Wolf stated in her decision.

Concerning the federal request for the list of transgender athletes, the Principals’ Association said it does not maintain a list of transgender athletes, and only possesses requests by transgender athletes to participate in sports before the 2022 policy change allowing such participation.

The Principals’ Association contends that those records contain personal biographical details and sensitive healthcare records.

Judge Wolf ruled that the burden of producing such sensitive records outweighs any likely benefit to the federal government.

The judge also questioned the motivation of the federal request for information on transgender athletes.

“There is good reason to be cautious in requiring the disclosure of the names of individual transgender athletes and their personal details, where, as other courts have recognized, this “Administration has been explicit about its disapproval of the transgender community,” Judge Wolf wrote in her decision.

The overall federal lawsuit under the Trump administration against Maine’s practice of allowing transgender athletes in girls’ sports is ongoing.

Latest Headlines

2 hours ago in Entertainment, National, Trending

The Latest: Artemis II fully fueled for NASA’s historic return to the moon

NASA's launch team has loaded more than 700,000 gallons of fuel into the 32-story Space Launch System rocket, setting the stage for the Artemis II mission crew members to board...

2 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Megan Thee Stallion takes 2 Broadway shows off after illness during ‘Moulin Rouge!’

Megan Thee Stallion was rushed to the hospital after "feeling very ill" while onstage on Broadway in "Moulin Rouge! The Musical." She later took to social media to explain...

2 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Bruce Springsteen brings ‘Streets of Minneapolis’ home as he launches US tour with ‘War’

Bruce Springsteen was in a defiant but upbeat mood as he returned Tuesday night to the "Streets of Minneapolis" to launch his latest...

3 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Suspension lifted for helicopter pilots who hovered near Kid Rock’s home

The Army pilots who hovered two helicopters near Kid Rock's Tennessee home during a training run while he clapped and saluted have had their...

3 hours ago in Entertainment, Sports

Men’s NCAA tournament averaging 10.3 million viewers, its most-watched since 1993

The men's NCAA tournament is averaging 10.3 million viewers through the Elite Eight, according to Nielsen. That is the tournament's best audience since...