The Denver Post

Passport’s gender listing to be revisited

- By Colleen Slevin

Under a ruling from a federal appeals court, the U.S. State Department is once again being ordered to consider whether to grant an intersex person a passport if they do not specify a gender.

On Tuesday, a threejudge panel of the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver concluded the State Department had authority to deny an applicatio­n with no gender specified but had exercised it in an arbitrary and capricious manner with some of its stated reasons not supported by evidence.

The judges said the State Department should reconsider the applicatio­n by Dana Zzyym because it’s not clear if it would have reached the same conclusion without relying on those reasons, including its assertion that there is no medical consensus on who is intersex.

In a statement released by Lambda Legal, which is representi­ng Zzyym, Zzyym said the most recent ruling was disappoint­ing but the bid to get a passport would continue.

“I’m not deterred. I knew this would be a long battle and I’m ready to continue the fight,” Zzyym said.

The State Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Zzyym was born with ambiguous physical sexual characteri­stics and identifies as nonbinary in gender.

Zzyym was first denied a passport in 2015 after requesting X as a gender marker.

In 2016, U.S. District Judge Brooke Jackson ordered the department to reconsider Zzyym’s applicatio­n.

He then threw out the department’s second rejection from 2017, when all U.S. states listed only two genders on their identity documents.

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