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A transgender athlete at the center of a case that will be heard by the US Supreme Court later this month has been accused of sexual harassment and using intimidation tactics against girls.
The case involves two biological males from West Virginia who wanted to compete on the middle and high school girls' sports teams.
A former female track and field teammate, Adaleia Cross, alleges one of the males "made comments to her that constituted sexual harassment in the girls' locker room" when they were in middle school together.
Cross was one grade ahead of the male athlete. She ended up quitting the high school team when the biological male joined so she didn't have to share a locker room with him.
Fox News spoke with Cross's mother about the allegation.
"When Adaleia first told us, she told us that [the trans athlete] was telling her and other girls ‘s--- my d---,’" Abby Cross alleged. "[The trans athlete] was saying to her, coming up and saying to her, ‘I’m going to stick my d--- in your p---- and also in your a--.' At different times [the trans athlete] was saying these things to her."
The ACLU, which represents the trans athletes, said the allegations were unsubstantiated.
The Cross's attorney said their "client has sworn under oath and under penalty of perjury in numerous cases about the events that took place between her and the male athlete."
Note that a coalition of 130 congressional Democrats, including Connecticut Reps. Rosa DeLauro and Joe Courtney, previously filed an amicus brief to the Supreme Court and urged it to rule in favor of the trans athletes.
In the brief, DeLauro, Courtney and their colleagues argued that "categorical bans preventing transgender students from participating on sports teams consistent with their gender identity impose significant harm on all children--especially girls" through the "harassment and policing of children’s “reproductive biology.”
The brief further argues that bans on trans athletes undermine the ability of trans students to participate in their school community, and "are not substantially related to an important government interest."






