New York Daily News

Judge denies bid by Nassau to sue Tish in trans flap

- BY TIM BALK

A federal judge on Friday dismissed a lawsuit brought by Nassau County against New York Attorney General Letitia James, who has urged the county to withdraw a controvers­ial transgende­r sports ban.

The county filed the lawsuit last month in an effort to prevent James from taking her own legal action over the ban, which prevents transgende­r women and girls from participat­ing in sports consistent with their gender identity in about 100 county-run facilities.

The dismissal of the suit was not unexpected. Last week, the judge, Nusrat Choudhury, ruled that the county lacked standing to bring the lone claim in its complaint against James, a Democrat.

Nassau County’s Republican executive, Bruce Blakeman, said Friday that he would appeal the decision.

“I am shocked that a federal judge with a background as a Civil Liberties Union lawyer would not give girls and women their day in court,” Blakeman said in a statement.

Blakeman has presented the ban as an effort to prevent transgende­r women and girls from gaining an unfair competitiv­e advantage in sports. He has not cited examples of such an issue surfacing in his county, instead predicting that it will emerge in the future.

Nassau County’s ban does not apply to transgende­r men playing in men’s sports.

Before Blakeman filed the complaint, James urged Blakeman to rescind the ban in a statement that described the order as “transphobi­c and blatantly illegal.” Her office also penned a cease-and-desist letter to the county.

But as of Friday, James’ office had not sued over the ban.

Her spokeswoma­n Alexis Richards issued a statement Friday saying that the decision represente­d a “tremendous victory for justice and the rule of law.” But the statement added, “It’s past time for Nassau County to rescind this order.”

Blakeman’s complaint sought a declarator­y judgment holding that the county order is legal. The Republican did not get it.

In court filings, James’ office accused Nassau County of breaking state and federal law, and requested the dismissal of Blakeman’s suit. But her legal team did not use the case, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, as the context to ask a judge to quash the ban.

Separately, the New York Civil Liberties Union has taken Nassau County to state court over the ban.

The NYCLU’s complaint, filed in State Supreme Court on behalf of a Nassau County women’s roller derby league, charges that the ban demands discrimina­tion on the basis of gender identity in violation of state law. The lawsuit says the league, the Long Island Roller Rebels, has at least one member who could be barred from playing under the ban.

The case has been stayed because Nassau County has sought to move it to federal court, according to the NYCLU.

“This is not about the merits of our case but a delay tactic by Blakeman, which we’ll strongly oppose,” Arianna Fishman, a spokeswoma­n for the NYCLU, wrote in an

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