Current:Home > InvestSignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Rules allow transgender woman at Wyoming chapter, and a court can't interfere, sorority says -AssetScope
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Rules allow transgender woman at Wyoming chapter, and a court can't interfere, sorority says
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-09 05:09:30
A national sorority has defended allowing a transgender woman into its University of Wyoming chapter,SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center saying in a new court motion that the chapter followed sorority rules despite a lawsuit from seven women in the organization who argued the opposite.
Seven members of Kappa Kappa Gamma at Wyoming's only four-year state university sued in March, saying the sorority violated its own rules by admitting Artemis Langford last year. Six of the women refiled the lawsuit in May after a judge twice barred them from suing anonymously.
The Kappa Kappa Gamma motion to dismiss, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Cheyenne, is the sorority's first substantive response to the lawsuit, other than a March statement by its executive director, Kari Kittrell Poole, that the complaint contains "numerous false allegations."
"The central issue in this case is simple: do the plaintiffs have a legal right to be in a sorority that excludes transgender women? They do not," the motion to dismiss reads.
The policy of Kappa Kappa Gamma since 2015 has been to allow the sorority's more than 145 chapters to accept transgender women. The policy mirrors those of the 25 other sororities in the National Panhellenic Conference, the umbrella organization for sororities in the U.S. and Canada, according to the Kappa Kappa Gamma filing.
The sorority sisters opposed to Langford's induction could presumably change the policy if most sorority members shared their view, or they could resign if "a position of inclusion is too offensive to their personal values," the sorority's motion to dismiss says.
"What they cannot do is have this court define their membership for them," the motion asserts, adding that "private organizations have a right to interpret their own governing documents."
Even if they didn't, the motion to dismiss says, the lawsuit fails to show how the sorority violated or unreasonably interpreted Kappa Kappa Gamma bylaws.
The sorority sisters' lawsuit asks U.S. District Court Judge Alan Johnson to declare Langford's sorority membership void and to award unspecified damages.
The lawsuit claims Langford's presence in the Kappa Kappa Gamma house made some sorority members uncomfortable. Langford would sit on a couch for hours while "staring at them without talking," the lawsuit alleges.
The lawsuit also names the national Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority council president, Mary Pat Rooney, and Langford as defendants. The court lacks jurisdiction over Rooney, who lives in Illinois and hasn't been involved in Langford's admission, according to the sorority's motion to dismiss.
The lawsuit fails to state any claim of wrongdoing by Langford and seeks no relief from her, an attorney for Langford wrote in a separate filing Tuesday in support of the sorority's motion to dismiss the case.
Instead, the women suing "fling dehumanizing mud" throughout the lawsuit "to bully Ms. Langford on the national stage," Langford's filing says.
"This, alone, merits dismissal," the Langford document adds.
One of the seven Kappa Kappa Gamma members at the University of Wyoming who sued dropped out of the case when Johnson ruled they couldn't proceed anonymously. The six remaining plaintiffs are Jaylyn Westenbroek, Hannah Holtmeier, Allison Coghan, Grace Choate, Madeline Ramar and Megan Kosar.
- In:
- Lawsuit
- Education
veryGood! (817)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- NCAA apologizes, fixes court overnight. Uneven 3-point line blamed on 'human error'
- LSU's Angel Reese tearfully addresses critics postgame: 'I've been attacked so many times'
- YMcoin Exchange: leader in the IDO market
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- ‘It was the most unfair thing’: Disobedience, school discipline and racial disparity
- Conjoined Twins Abby and Brittany Hensel Epically Clap Back at Haters
- Google to destroy billions of data records to settle incognito lawsuit
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Dear Daughter: Celebrity Dads Share Their Hopes for the Next Generation of Women
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Horoscopes Today, April 1, 2024
- Drake Bell Shares How Josh Peck Helped Him After Quiet On Set
- Freight railroads must keep 2-person crews, according to new federal rule
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Too Hot to Handle's Francesca Farago Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With Jesse Sullivan
- How this history fan gets to read JFK's telegrams, Titanic insurance claims, UFO docs
- Uvalde mayor abruptly resigns, citing health concerns, ahead of City Council meeting
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Powerball jackpot nears $1 billion as drawing for giant prize nears
Here's why Angel Reese and LSU will beat Iowa and Caitlin Clark, again
Search underway for 2 women in Oklahoma after suspicious disappearance
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
Invaders from underground are coming in cicada-geddon. It’s the biggest bug emergence in centuries
College will cost up to $95,000 this fall. Schools say it’s OK, financial aid can numb sticker shock
Gen V’s Chance Perdomo Honored by Patrick Schwarzenegger and More Costars After His Death