
Becky Pepper-Jackson, a 15-year-old sophomore at Bridgeport High School, won the West Virginia Class AAA girls shot put championship with a personal best throw of 38 feet, 11.75 inches. Her athletic success comes as she is the transgender teenager at the center of a major U.S. Supreme Court case about transgender athletes. The case involves West Virginia’s 2021 “Save Women’s Sports Act,” which bars transgender girls and women from competing on female sports teams in public schools and colleges. Pepper-Jackson sued after being blocked from her school’s cross-country and track teams. The Supreme Court’s decision is expected to affect whether states can categorically exclude transgender girls from girls’ athletics under Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause.
"Pepper-Jackson, 15, won the West Virginia Class AAA girls shot put championship Friday with a personal best throw of 38 feet, 11.75 inches, according to results by the West Virginia Gazette-Mail. The victory came roughly four months after the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in her challenge to West Virginia's transgender athlete ban and just weeks before the justices are expected to issue their opinion. A ruling is expected in the coming days."
"The case, argued before the justices in January alongside a challenge to Idaho's similar law, could determine whether states may categorically exclude transgender girls from girls' athletics under Title IX and the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause. The outcome is expected to shape school sports policies nationwide. West Virginia enacted its "Save Women's Sports Act" in 2021, barring transgender girls and women from competing on female sports teams in public schools and colleges."
"Pepper-Jackson sued the state with support from the American Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal after she was blocked from participating in her school's cross-country and track teams. According to court filings previously reviewed by The Advocate, Pepper-Jackson began receiving puberty blockers and hormone therapy before experiencing testosterone-driven puberty. Her attorneys have argued that the state's assertions about inherent competitive advantage do not reflect her circumstances and that the law unlawfully singles out t"
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