Another trans athlete sues school over being banned from women's sports in growing trend
Former NCAA runner Caroline Hill joins ‘America’s Newsroom’ to discuss her fight to have her records, broken by a transgender athlete, restored in her name.
A third transgender athlete has sued a U.S. college in the span of one month in response to the ongoing national crackdown on biological males in women's sports.
However, the latest lawsuit also claims a trans athlete was reinstated to a women's team in April despite NCAA policy and federal law prohibiting it.
Trans track and field runner Evelyn Parts is suing Swarthmore College and the NCAA, alleging the school violated Title IX when it banned Parts from competing on the women’s track and field team earlier this year.
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Parts alleges the school said Parts could no longer compete on the women's team in February, the same month the NCAA changed its gender eligibility policy to prevent biological males from competing in the women's category after President Donald Trump signed the "Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports" executive order.
Parts' lawsuit also claims the trans athlete was "fully reinstated" to the Swarthmore women's track team April 11. Parts claims to have been allowed to compete on the women’s team until graduating in May, even after the policy changes and Trump's executive order went into effect.
Parts is listed as the winner of the women's 10,000 meters at the Bill Butler Invitational in April and as a participant in the Paul Donahue Invite that same month and the Centennial Championships in early May, according to the athlete's Swarthmore Athletics page.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Swarthmore College and the NCAA for comment.
Parts sued less than a month after fellow trans runner Sadie


