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A female high school volleyball team saw more games last weekend with a trans player from California. Confiscation is the first to come litigation Submitted by three current and former players to school district and state agencies.
According to Maribel Munoz Two student athletes Who is the plaintiff in the lawsuit? Munonz told Fox News Digital that Aquinas High School, Yucaipa High School and San Dima High School were confiscated.
Jurupa Valley won the victory on September 13 after being confiscated in the match, according to Maxpreps, a high school sports archive website.
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Southern California News Corporate Newspaper Reported Last weekend, Aquinas, Yucaipa and San Dima were all forbidden to the Jurupa Valley.
Fox News Digital has been in touch with these schools and Jurupa Valley.
Prior to last weekend, four teams have been confirmed to have been forfeited this season in Jurupa Valley – Riverside Poly High School, World High School RIM, Orange Vista High School and AB Miller High School.
Then, on September 9, Munoz’s daughters Madison and Alyssa McPherson filed a lawsuit with the company along with teammate Hadeel Hazameh Advocate faith and freedom For the Jurupa Unified School District (JUSD), the California Interschool Federation (CIF) and the California Department of Education (CDE), they share team and locker room experiences with trans athletes. Alyssa McPherson and Hazameh had previously told Fox News Digital that they would leave the team as long as they were participating.
“The plaintiff was intimidated by the defendant’s intentionally hostile environment where school officials bullied them to examine their objections to competing with and competing with and sharing intimate and private spaces with men,” the lawsuit said.
Trans volleyball crisis in Gavin Newsom
The McPherson Family, considered a practice Catholic, claimed that “believe that God created humanity as men and women, gender is a fixed characteristic that cannot be changed. Their faith can illustrate their understanding of human identity and shape their importance to knowing and respecting male and female uniqueists”, every court document.
Meanwhile, Hazameh and her family believe that “a religious obligation prevents HH from exposing her hair or body to men, including wearing a hijab, including under the guidance of Islamic teachings, they believe that men and women have different biological differences, roles and responsibilities and should be respected and reserved.”
“Their faith emphasizes modesty, dignity and respect for gender differences, and these boundaries must conform to a biological gender in practice and identity.”
JUSD directly encouraged critics to have questions about government officials and lawmakers in a statement previously provided to Fox News Digital, but the district has not commented on the lawsuit.
“School districts do not make laws for California and have no ability to ignore or change them. However, because they are primarily state-funded agencies, they must follow them. Because these issues play a role in our courts and in the media, any advocacy for these matters should be directed to state and federal officials to be elected as laws and policies for public education.
A CDE spokesman told Fox News Digital: “The California Department of Education cannot comment on the matter because we cannot comment on the pending lawsuit.”

Women’s volleyball players Hadeel Hazameh, Alyssa McPherson and Madison McPherson (Contributed by the Proponents of Faith and Freedom)
CIF has not responded to Fox News Digital’s request for response to the lawsuit.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office issued a statement to Fox News Digital in response to complaints from athletes and parents, indicating that the responsibility fell on the CIF, the CDE and the state legislature, but not on him.
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“CIF is an independent nonprofit organization responsible for high school athletics. The California Department of Education is an independent constitutional office. Neither constitution is under the governor’s authority,” the statement said. “CIF and the CDE said they comply with existing state laws – which were passed in 2013, signed by Gov. Jerry Brown (Not Newsom) and signed with 21 other states. To change the law, the legislature needs to bring bills to the governor. They don’t.”
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