States join lawsuit against school's 'transgender support plan' for 13-year-old girl: 21 Republican attorneys general fight for parents suing teachers for going behind their backs
January Littlejohn said school bosses spoke to her 13-year-old daughter about changing her name and which bathroom she wanted to use without parental permission. The Littlejohns sued the school district in 2021 for violating their parental rights
By Kelly Laco
Daily Mail
May 31, 2023
A group of 21 Republican-led states are taking legal action on behalf of Florida parents who sued their daughter's school after teachers launched a 'transgender support plan' for their 13-year-old without asking for their parental consent.
January Littlejohn said her then 13-year-old daughter had a group of friends who were 'obsessed' with anything to do with the LGBTQ community, and when three of them began identifying as trans or non-binary, her daughter said she was confused about her own gender.
Despite bringing their daughter to a counselor to help her work through her confusion, the Littlejohns learned that school bosses had spoken to the youngster about changing her name and which bathroom she wanted to use - without their permission.
As a result, Littlejohn and her husband sued the school for violating their parental rights at the end of 2021, and now other state leaders are getting involved.
Littlejohn, center left, and her husband, right, with their family. Littlejohn and her husband are parents to three. They live in Tallahassee, Florida
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, who is leading the 21-state brief in support of the Littlejohns with Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody, told DailyMail.com that it is 'unconscionable' that school districts are 'deliberately' shutting parents out of decisions.
'Parents have a fundamental and longstanding constitutional right to direct the upbringing and care of their children,' he said.
'Unfortunately, it's happening in schools across the country. It's past time for the courts to do their job and step in to protect children and put a stop to woke school administrators violating parents' rights,' Knudsen continued.
The state leaders filed the brief Tuesday in the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals.
The states who signed on in addition to Montana and Florida include: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and West Virginia.
The case rose to prominence when Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis tweeted about it as he worked to pass his parental rights bill.
The now-passed bill bans teachers from giving classroom instruction on 'sexual orientation' or 'gender identity' in kindergarten through twelfth grade.
He posted on March 28: 'The bill I signed today protects Florida parents like January Littlejohn. School officials manipulated her daughter to ''transition,'' calling her a male name & pronouns without January's knowledge or consent. This is wrong & today's legislation will ensure it doesn't happen again.'
When school resumed in 2020, Littlejohn told a teacher at the Deerlake Middle School in Tallahassee, Florida, about the situation and informed her that she and her husband were not affirming their daughter's new preferred name and pronouns at home while they were working through her feelings, and that they did not feel that transitioning was in her best interest.
Littlejohn says officials at the Deerlake Middle School in Tallahassee, Florida, gave her daughter a 'transgender support plan' to fill out after she expressed gender confusion
The case rose to prominence when DeSantis tweeted about it on March 28 as he signed his parental rights bill
1 comment:
Not in Texas.
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