Tag Archives: Tennessees

Transgender patients sue the hospital that provided their records to Tennessee’s attorney general – ABC News

  1. Transgender patients sue the hospital that provided their records to Tennessee’s attorney general ABC News
  2. Vanderbilt sued after turning over transgender health records to AG USA TODAY
  3. Patients sue Vanderbilt for releasing transgender clinic records to Tennessee AG – Tennessee Lookout Tennessee Lookout
  4. Transgender patients sue Vanderbilt over ‘serious harm’ from disclosed medical records WTVC
  5. Lawsuit: Vanderbilt University Medical Center ‘failed its patients’ in handing over trans health records News Channel 5 Nashville
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Best in College Sports: Tennessee’s success across the board earns honors for 2022-23 athletic season – CBS Sports

  1. Best in College Sports: Tennessee’s success across the board earns honors for 2022-23 athletic season CBS Sports
  2. Tennessee Earns CBS Sports’ Annual “Best in College Sports” Honor – University of Tennessee Athletics University of Tennessee Athletics
  3. Best in the Nation? Tennessee Athletics Claims Prestigious Honor Entering 2023 Sports Year Rocky Top Insider
  4. Tennessee Athletics earns unique national honor AtoZ Sports
  5. Danny White says NCAA ruling on Tennessee football was ‘fair and just’ Knoxville News Sentinel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Celebrity Cheer Coach Dominick Frizzell and Tennessee’s Premier Athletics Hit With Sex Abuse Lawsuit

The competitive cheerleading community was hit with another bombshell lawsuit on Tuesday, alleging that a Tennessee gym fostered an environment that allowed one of its celebrity coaches to sexually and emotionally abuse at least two teenage male athletes for years.

Among them: a 15-year-old boy who told The Daily Beast that the coach sent him sexually explicit messages, photographs, and videos for months earlier this year when he was still 14. When the coach became aware he was being investigated by the sport’s governing body, U.S. All-Star Federation (USASF), over complaints made by another athlete, the teenager said the messages turned sinister—and included threats that he wanted to “destroy” the initial whistleblower.

“He made it feel like it was a normal thing and it was OK,” the boy, identified as John Doe 1 in a lawsuit filed in Tennessee federal court, said about the abuse. “It wasn’t fair. I feel like it was happening to multiple people.”

John Doe 1 is one of two teenage boys in the lawsuit demanding a jury trial. Among the defendants named in the suit are Varsity Spirit, its associated brands, and its former founder Jeff Webb; USASF; USA Cheer; Charlesbank Capital Partner; Bain Capital; Premier Athletics, where the two teenage boys were allegedly abused, and the gym’s manager Susan Traylor, and coach Dominick “Nick” Frizzell.

Frizzell is well-known in the cheer world and previously competed with a nationally renowned All-Stars team. Currently, he’s a cheerleader at the University of Tennessee and has a large social media following, including 31,000 followers on Instagram and 48,000 on TikTok. (Both accounts were made private on Tuesday morning.)

A spokesperson for the University of Tennessee told The Daily Beast that Frizzell was suspended from participating in the school’s Spirit Program activities on Sept. 16 and “was formally dismissed from the program” on Tuesday.

via Facebook/Premier Athletics – Knoxville West

The lawsuit, obtained by The Daily Beast, alleges that Traylor allowed Frizzell to “emotionally, physically, and sexually exploit and abuse…Premier’s young athletes.” “Premier Athletics and Defendant Frizzell, along with other gyms and coaches, were empowered and placed in positions of trust and authority by the Varsity Defendants, all while the Varsity Defendants knew or should have known that these same coaches and gyms were pervasively abusing athletes or allowing athletes to be abused,” the lawsuit added.

In a statement to The Daily Beast, USA Cheer Executive Director Lauri Harris said the allegations are “tragic and we are heartbroken for any victims of abuse.” “Sexual abuse and misconduct in all forms is reprehensible and has no place in sport or society,” Harris added. “USA Cheer will continue to work with the entire cheer community and all relevant agencies to rid it of bad actors and hold those responsible to account.”

An attorney representing Premier Athletics denied the allegations, claiming the lawsuit contains “many inaccuracies and false statements” about the gym and Traylor. “The health and safety of athletes that train at its facilities is extremely important to Premier Knoxville,” lawyer Chad Hatmaker said. “Premier Knoxville has taken all of the appropriate and required steps based on the reports it received.”

In a statement to The Daily Beast, Varsity Spirit said they rejected “any accusation that Varsity Spirit enabled such unthinkable behavior.” “We are outraged that predators took advantage of cheerleading programs to abuse innocent children,” the statement said.

Other named defendants did not immediately respond to The Daily Beast’s request for comment.

For Mary Doe, the mother of John Doe 1, who also requested anonymity, the notion that she was forced to come forward and file a lawsuit against the people who were supposed to be educating and protecting her son “is maddening.” The lawsuit alleges that Mary Doe wasn’t informed about the allegations made by the initial athlete against Frizzell until this month—and that she and her son were never contacted by Premier after they opened an investigation.

“I am angry that we had to do this,” Mary Doe said. “I am angry that to even move forward, to expose and make sure that something happens to the people that completely botched this up and didn’t protect my son, it has to be a public situation. It’s a necessary evil that has to happen.”

The lawsuit is only the latest harrowing sexual-abuse scandal to hit the cheerleading community. Earlier this month, The Daily Beast first reported on a damning lawsuit filed against Scott Foster, a prominent South Carolina cheerleading coach who died by suicide in August. It alleges he sexually abused male and female athletes and presided over a culture that allowed his staff to do the same. His gym, Rockstar Cheer, has since been closed “indefinitely.” Both lawsuits allege that the well-known private equity firm Bain Capital cashed in on the chaos.

The cheerleading community has also been rocked by the 12-year prison sentence given to Jerry Harris, a former breakout star on Netflix’s Cheer who pleaded guilty to charges involving child porn and sex crimes against minors, and lawsuits filed against well-known Cheer Athletics Coach Jason McCartney, who is accused of “twisted” sex abuse against his Texas athletes.

“This lawsuit makes it clear that we’re not talking about some isolated incident in South Carolina,” Strom Law Firm’s Bakari Sellers, one of the lawyers who filed Tuesday’s suit, said in a statement. “This is a nationwide epidemic of abuse that infects all of competitive cheerleading enabled and concealed by Varsity Spirit, the U.S. All Star Federation (USASF) and Bain Capital.”

The lawsuit filed on Tuesday takes direct aim at Premier Athletics in Tennessee, which was purchased by Varsity Spirit in 2005. The “cheer, dance, and tumbling gym” is a USASF member gym that prides itself on “highly trained” and “highly qualified” instructors.

The lawsuit states that in 2018, when he was just 14, John Doe 2 met 19-year-old Frizzell when they were both athletes at Premier Athletics. Frizzell added the teenager on Snapchat but it wasn’t until two years later, the lawsuit states, that Frizzell “finally convinced Plaintiff John Doe 2 to meet up, and they began to engage in oral sex and other sexual conduct.”

“When Defendant Frizzell turned twenty-one, he told Plaintiff John Doe 2 that he could get in trouble for having sex with Plaintiff John Doe 2,” the lawsuit said. “Nevertheless, the conduct continued.”

The lawsuit alleges that Premier Athletics knew about the “ongoing sexual relationship,” but nobody ever questioned “Frizzell’s continued interaction” with John Doe 2 or “any other underaged athlete.” Instead, Frizzell was hired as a coach.

Around the same time, in 2020, John Doe 1 began cheering at Premier Athletics and became aware of Frizzell, who is described in the lawsuit as a “cheerlebrity.” By the end of 2021, Frizzell, who was in his early twenties, was following John Doe 1 on Snapchat—even though he was aware John Doe 1 was only 14, the lawsuit states.

In January 2022, Frizzell began sending “sexually explicit messages and photographs of himself” to John Doe 1, including photographs of his penis and videos of him masturbating, the suit alleges. On several occasions, Frizzell also allegedly asked John Doe 1 to meet up, including once in May when the two engaged in oral sex.

About a month later, the lawsuit states that John Doe 1 learned that a fellow underaged athlete was also receiving sexually explicit photographs from Frizzell—and that the other teenager had asked Frizzell to “stop behaving in a predatory manner.” (The fellow underaged athlete is not included in the lawsuit.)

Shortly thereafter, John Doe 1 changed to a new gym. The teenager told The Daily Beast that despite changing gyms—a decision he said was the “best choice”—and despite Frizzell knowing that a sexual misconduct complaint had been made against him, he still contacted John Doe 1.

In one July 2022 message, he “bragged” that he was “not permanently banned” and that Susan Traylor said she wasn’t going to fire him, the lawsuit states, adding that Frizzell sent John Doe 1 “numerous messages threatening the minor athlete who made the initial report.”

John Doe 1 told The Daily Beast that some of the messages included that Frizzell “wanted to destroy” the teenager that reported him. He said he soon found out that some people at Premier were being interviewed about Frizzell’s misconduct—but neither he nor his mother were ever contacted.

“We were never contacted, talked about it all,” Mary Doe said. “It’s infuriating.”

The lawsuit alleges that Frizzell even tried to contact John Doe 1 in an attempt to influence how he would respond to questions about their interactions. Earlier this month, John Doe 1’s new gym contacted Mary Doe to inform her that Premier Athletics was investigating allegations of abuse against Frizzell and that those allegations included her son.

“It’s been a complete whirlwind,” Mary Doe, who ultimately made a report to law enforcement, added. “It’s completely maddening to me.”

“Ultimately, Defendant Premier Athletics’ bungled internal investigation determined that insufficient proof existed to hold Defendant Frizzell accountable,” the lawsuit states, adding that the determination was based, at least in part, on the fact that John Doe 1 had left the gym.

According to the lawsuit, Premier Athletics acknowledged in a Sept. 18 Instagram statement that an “additional report” had been filed with law enforcement, but provided no information.

In a statement, Premier Athletics lawyer Chad Hatmaker stated that Traylor was told by an athlete on June 26, 2022, that he had received inappropriate photos from Frizzell. “No copies or screenshots of the photographs were provided to substantiate this claim and this was the first time Ms. Traylor or Premier Knoxville had received reports about this alleged misconduct,” Hatmaker said, adding that Frizzell was suspended and the athlete’s claim was immediately reported to local law enforcement as well as USASF.

The statement said that law enforcement “did not substantiate the complaint, nor did USASF” but Premier Knoxville terminated Frizzell. On Sept. 18, the statement adds, the gym was informed of another student—who they believed is John Doe 1—who had a “physical relationship” with Frizzell. But the gym states that neither the teenager nor his mother reported the claim—but Premiere Athletics went to law enforcement and USAF that day.

“After reporting the matter to law enforcement Premier Knoxville did not have any contact with the alleged victim or his family so as not to be falsely accused of interfering with law enforcement’s investigation,” the gym’s statement added.

For Mary Doe, the latest allegations against Frizzell are symptomatic of an ongoing problem in the cheerleading community. She and her son both said they hope this lawsuit lands Frizzell in jail and that Premier is “held accountable for what they did.”

“It’s disgusting,” she said.

According to USA Cheer’s ineligibility list, Frizzell’s membership with USASF as a coach and athlete has been temporarily suspended “pending investigation” because he violated policy “related to athlete protection.”

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Tennessee’s Drew Gilbert and pitching coach Frank Anderson ejected from NCAA Tournament game vs Notre Dame

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Knoxville, TN – It has been a wild atmosphere in Knoxville as Tennessee and Notre Dame square off in the NCAA Tournament. The Super Regionals started on Friday night, with both teams squaring off in game one. It was the fireworks from the Irish batters and the outbursts from the Vols squad that have caused controversy in Knoxville already.

In the bottom 5th inning, with Notre Dame leading 8-2, Tennessee outfielder Drew Gilbert was at bat, but what was coming next could change the dynamic of the Saturday rematch. After the home plate umpire called a strike, Gilbert looked back and told the umpire that the call was ‘F—ing Terrible’ according to a video of the incident. I am no lip-reader and could not tell from my vantage of the play, but the video looks to check out.

Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello discusses a call with an umpire during game one of the NCAA Super Regionals between the Tennessee Volunteers and Notre Dame Fighting Irish on June 10, 2022, at Lindsey Nelson Stadium in Knoxville, TN. 
(Photo by Bryan Lynn/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

NCAA UMPIRE SHOVES EAST CAROLINA’S BRYSON WORRELL AFTER STOPPING TO ADMIRE HOME RUN DURING REGIONAL TOURNAMENT

After the umpire immediately tossed Gilbert, Tennessee pitching coach came rushing out of the dugout and shared his thoughts with the home plate umpire, which led to his ejection as well. According to NCAA rules, both Gilbert and Anderson will be forced to miss Saturday’s game because of the ejection.

Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello and outfielder Drew Gilbert (1) react to a call during game one of the NCAA Super Regionals between the Tennessee Volunteers and Notre Dame Fighting Irish on June 10, 2022, at Lindsey Nelson Stadium in Knoxville, TN. 
(Photo by Bryan Lynn/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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The Vols have struggled all night, with Notre Dame hitting four homers through the first four innings. It will take some effort for Tennessee to get back in this game.

Tennessee outfielder Drew Gilbert (1) hits the ball during game one of the NCAA Super Regionals between the Tennessee Volunteers and Notre Dame Fighting Irish on June 10, 2022, at Lindsey Nelson Stadium in Knoxville, TN. 
(Photo by Bryan Lynn/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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These two teams will face off in game two on Saturday afternoon.

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Rams vs. Titans score: Tennessee’s defense rattles Matthew Stafford, rolls to big ‘Sunday Night Football’ win

So much for the Rams proving in prime time that they belong atop the list of Super Bowl contenders. Los Angeles played host to “Sunday Night Football” in Week 9, but Sunday’s prime-time affair belonged almost exclusively to the visiting Titans. While Ryan Tannehill and an offense featuring Adrian Peterson among fill-ins for the injured Derrick Henry did not always explode, Tennessee’s defense definitely did, with Jeffery Simmons and Co. disrupting Matthew Stafford early and often to headline a 28-16 rout at SoFi Stadium.

Tennessee has now won five straight to improve to 7-2, perhaps solidifying itself as the new favorite in the AFC. The Rams, meanwhile, are now 7-2 and officially behind the red-hot Cardinals in the NFC West.

Here are some immediate takeaways from Sunday night’s big Titans win:

Why the Titans won

On a night that started feisty and physical on both sides, they were opportunistic amid the early punches: after a deep-ball pick prematurely ended their first drive, they held the Rams to a field goal and then, a few series later, forced Stafford into back-to-back interceptions deep in his own territory. Simmons wrecked things up front, rattling Stafford out of the gate, while Denico Autry and Harold Landry also stepped up to collapse the pocket. The front-seven heat took pressure off a secondary that had surprisingly little trouble containing Cooper Kupp and Co. for much of the night. And offensively, while Tannehill and their post-Henry running game lacked pizzazz, they successfully grinded it out when they needed to, outmuscling L.A. throughout the evening.

Why the Rams lost

Stafford has been an MVP candidate all year, headlining the Rams’ high-flying attack, but against the Titans, he looked an awful lot like the guy who spent so many years ducking and covering and forcing things in Detroit. His protection was poor, no doubt, with Austin Corbett and the Rams’ interior frequently folding at the will of Simmons and the rest of Mike Vrabel’s front. But the QB wasn’t great himself, either, missing open downfield shots and throwing a pair of really ill-advised passes that ended up giving Tennessee the turnover advantage. Kupp and Robert Woods showed up too late (as did Sean McVay’s fourth-down play-calling), and the run game didn’t really make a difference. Defensively, Aaron Donald and Jalen Ramsey did their usual thing, but penalties and perhaps a shade of indifference left them vulnerable in the final stages of the game, too.

Turning point

As soon as Stafford threw a pick-six, the Titans actually appeared poised to win this. The Rams led 3-0 when Stafford was first picked off, with David Long Jr. nabbing his throw and setting up a quick Geoff Swaim score. Trailing 7-3, though, on the first play of the ensuing drive, he inexplicably fired a short one toward Woods with multiple cover men in the area, and Kevin Byard had no problem returning the pick 24 yards for the score. The 14-3 hole proved too deep to overcome.

Play of the game

It has to be the play in which Stafford got whipped around and pulled a Carson Wentz, gifting a pick to the opponent near his own end zone — a play that defined a night full of Titans-led disruptions:

What’s next

The Titans (7-2) will return home in Week 10 after their big prime-time win, this time to face the Saints (5-3), who just lost a narrow one to the Falcons. The Rams (7-2), meanwhile, will hit the road for an important NFC West showdown with the 49ers (3-5), who just fell to the Cardinals, on “Monday Night Football.”

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Tennessee’s former vaccine manager said she was sent a dog muzzle before she was fired

Dr. Michelle Fiscus, a pediatrician who served as Tennessee’s medical director of vaccine-preventable diseases and immunization, was fired Monday. In the week prior to her termination, she received a package containing a dog muzzle, she told CNN’s Anderson Cooper Wednesday.

Fiscus has been at the center of a political battle in Tennessee over the vaccination of adolescents against Covid-19. Before she was terminated, Fiscus released a memo citing Tennessee state law about whether minors may get medical care without their parents’ permission.

Backlash to the memo from state lawmakers was swift and comes amid political polarization of vaccines as experts urge Americans to get their doses and disinformation continues to drive large portions of the population away.

Fiscus said prior to her termination, a large Amazon package was delivered to her state office addressed to her. Inside she found a dog muzzle. There was no note and Fiscus said she contacted Amazon to try and determine who sent the muzzle. Amazon refused to reveal the sender, Fiscus said.

CNN has reached out to Amazon for comment.

“At first, I thought that was a joke and contacted a few friends, and then, when no one claimed it, I realized that that was something that was sent to me as some kind of a message,” Fiscus said.

At the advice of others, she said reported the incident to the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security, which confirmed to CNN it is investigating the dog muzzle package.

Fiscus said she told her husband, “They obviously didn’t know me because they sent me a size three which is for beagles and I’m obviously a pit bull, which requires a size six.” Fiscus said she is keeping the muzzle as a souvenir.

The memo Fiscus sent before she was fired

Fiscus told CNN she sent the memo at the center of the controversy because physicians who were administering Covid-19 vaccines asked her what to do when minors showed up to be inoculated without a parent.

In response, and in consultation with legal counsel at the Tennessee Department of Health, Fiscus said she sent a memo to the doctors citing the “mature minor doctrine,” which allows health care providers to decide if any child has the capacity to consent to vaccination themselves.

The policy has been in place for 34 years, was public facing on the Tennessee Department of Health website and was blessed by the governor’s office, she said.

But legislators quickly began contacting the health department asking questions about the memo that some said undermined parental authority. On Monday, Fiscus was fired. Tennessee’s health department told CNN by email Tuesday it could not comment on personnel matters.

Fiscus said her firing was a symptom of a trend in many public health departments across the country. In her state, she sees a “bowing of the department of health to some saber-rattling of some of our legislators who felt that it was inappropriate to share the mature minor doctrine that has been Tennessee Supreme Court case law since 1987.”

Legislative leaders are now seeking answers from Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee regarding his decision to fire the state’s top vaccination expert in the middle of a pandemic.

During a virtual meeting with state legislative members Wednesday, Tennessee’s Senate Democratic Caucus Chairwoman Raumesh Akbari said the decision to fire Fiscus has put the state in a more dangerous position.

“We have all the tools we need to get out of this pandemic but the failure of leadership at the top is making this hard,” Akbari said.

A halt to all adolescent vaccine outreach

Leading up to her firing, Fiscus said the department had halted all adolescent vaccine outreach, from Covid-19 communications to HPV reminders and acknowledgment of National Immunization Awareness Month.

The Tennessee Department of Health confirmed Wednesday it is temporarily halting all adolescent vaccine outreach, even for vaccines not related to Covid-19, telling CNN the issue is “polarized.”

“We recognize where we are around the national conversation around vaccinations and it is a polarized conversation, and that is true in our state. And so we’re just taking this opportunity to evaluate our messaging and to ensure that we’re not hurting our efforts,” spokeswoman Sarah Tanksley told CNN in a phone call.

Tanksley said Covid-19 and other childhood vaccines would still be available while the department of health re-evaluates the vaccination notification process. She said the goal was to ensure that vaccination reminders are sent to the parents of the adolescent.

In a few cases, immunization reminders were sent directly to minors who had contact information listed in the department’s electronic health records, according to a statement given to CNN by the Tennessee Department of Health.

Tanksley said she is confident the department of health will continue to successfully communicate with parents and providers.

“This is not a monthlong evaluation period or anything like that,” she said.

But Dr. Alex Jahangir, chairman of the Davidson County Board of Health in Tennessee, said Wednesday he worries the halt could result in preventable outbreaks.

Jahangir said the robust immunization program for children in the US has prevented outbreaks of diseases for decades.

“The best way to save millions of Tennesseans is to encourage vaccinations, to make them easy and not buy into any rhetoric that vaccinations are problematic,” he said. “I think the politicization of vaccinations can truly have a really negative impact on Tennesseans and people around the US.”

CNN’s Martin Savidge, Angela Barajas, Rebekah Riess,Tina Burnside Keri Enriquez and Lauren Mascarenhas contributed to this report.

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Judge blocks Tennessee’s transgender bathroom sign law

A federal judge on Friday blocked a Tennessee law that required businesses to post a notice if they allow transgender people to use bathrooms that match their gender identity.

Two weeks ago, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit on behalf of two business owners — who own Sanctuary, a performing arts and community center in Chattanooga, and Fido, a restaurant in Nashville, among other businesses — in an effort to block the law from taking effect July 1.

Judge Aleta A. Trauger of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee granted a preliminary injunction against the law while litigation proceeds.

“Restaurants and performing spaces are businesses, but that is not all they are; they are also among the most important physical locations in which communities—so often consigned, in this era, to electronic space—can gather and grow together in a manner rooted in a particular neighborhood, in a particular city, in a particular state,” Trauger wrote.

“The plaintiffs have presented evidence that they have strived to be welcoming spaces for communities that include transgender individuals and that the signage required by the Act would disrupt the welcoming environments that they wish to provide,” Trauger continued. “That harm would be real, and it is not a harm that could simply be remedied by some award at the end of litigation.”

Glenn Funk and Neal Pinkston, both district attorneys general, and Christopher Bainbridge, director of code enforcement, are named as defendants in the lawsuit and have not returned a request for comment. The communications director for the fourth defendant, Carter Lawrence, the state’s fire marshal, declined comment due to ongoing litigation.

Hedy Weinberg, the executive director of the ACLU of Tennessee, said the law is bad for businesses in Tennessee and harmful to trans people.

“We are glad the court saw that this law is likely unconstitutional and hope that the state gives up the wasteful effort to defend discrimination and a violation of the First Amendment,” Weinberg said in a statement.

Kye Sayers, owner of Sanctuary Performing Arts, said in the ACLU statement that she is glad the court “saw that forcing businesses to display a sign that hurts transgender and intersex people is unconstitutional.”

“These signs would have damaged our businesses and the environment we have tried to create for our community, customers, and staff,” she added.

Amy Allen, the mother of an eighth grade transgender boy, speaks after a Human Rights Campaign roundtable discussion on anti-transgender laws on May 21 in Nashville, Tenn.Mark Humphrey / AP file

Bob Bernstein, another plaintiff in the lawsuit and the owner of Fido and several local coffee shops, said in the statement the issue is one of free speech for him as a business owner, and he’s hopeful the judge’s injunction “leads to a permanent ban of an unconstitutional violation of my freedom of speech rights.”

The suit is one of two filed against the law. The other was filed last week by Mike Curb, a Nashville record label owner, who is represented by GLBTQ Legal Advocates and Defenders.

The new law requires business owners with even an informal policy that allows people to use whichever bathroom they want to post a sign that reads, “This facility maintains a policy of allowing the use of restrooms by either biological sex regardless of the designation on the restroom,” at the entrance of single-sex public restrooms, locker rooms, dressing areas or other facilities that are “designated for a specific biological sex … where a person would have a reasonable expectation of privacy.”

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Tim Rudd, R-Murfreesboro, said during legislative debate in May that it is meant to protect women and children “against sexual predators that could be taking advantage of policies, executive orders or legislation that may allow the opposite sex to enter a restroom, shower or locker room,” the Chattanooga Times Free Press reported.

Advocates have said the law is just a new iteration of laws passed in 2016 that sought to bar trans people from using the bathrooms that aligned with their gender identity, such as House Bill 2 in North Carolina.

At that time, proponents of what are known as “bathroom bills” used Rudd’s argument about predators, but a 2018 study from the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law found there is no evidence that trans-inclusive policies for public facilities increase safety risks.

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