SAN
DIEGO, Sept. 18, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Law firm
Bailey & Glasser, LLP, The precedent-setting Title IX sex
discrimination case against San Diego State
University for discriminating against its female-student
athletes continues to move forward. On April
12, 2023, U.S. District Court Judge Todd W. Robinson confirmed female
student-athletes deprived of equal athletic financial aid can sue
their schools for damages—and held ten of the women suing SDSU
could do so. Late Friday afternoon, September 15, 2023, ruling on SDSU's motion to
dismiss in part Plaintiffs' Third Amended Complaint, Judge Robinson
held that all seventeen of the women suing SDSU can seek such
damages.
Precedent-setting Title IX lawsuit against
San Diego State University
continues.
The court also rejected SDSU's argument that, because the case
had already taken so long that the women are no longer
student-athletes, they could not seek a court order stopping the
school from discriminating in the future. It held that, if the case
went forward as a class action, those who were student-athletes
when the case was filed could also seek a court order protecting
future student-athletes.
"This is a huge victory for the women athletes and everyone who
cares about stopping sex discrimination at SDSU and nationwide,"
said Arthur Bryant of Bailey Glasser, LLP, in Oakland, CA, lead counsel for the women. "The
school has cheated its female student-athletes out of millions of
dollars of equal athletic financial aid in the past few years
alone—and it still hasn't changed its ways. Now, all the women who
decided to stand up and fight can make SDSU pay. And the school
won't be able to keep discriminating in the future just because
it's delayed judgment day so far. "
"This critical ruling confirms what we've said all along—these
brave women deserve their day in court to hold SDSU accountable for
its past discriminatory behavior and to prevent it from engaging in
discriminatory behavior in the future," said Joshua Hammack of Bailey
Glasser, LLP in Washington,
DC, who took the lead in briefing and arguing the issues.
"This order ensures Plaintiffs can pursue both goals in court,
which is an important victory for them, for justice, and for women
everywhere."
"We hope and believe this ruling will make a big difference,"
said Plaintiff and former SDSU rower Natalie Figueroa. "A key point of our suit is
that women were not given an equal opportunity to receive athletic
financial aid. That was discrimination. I and other female
student-athletes could and would have gotten more aid if we were
given an equal opportunity to do so."
In addition to Figuero, the lawsuit was filed by past and then
current SDSU student-athletes Madison
Fisk, Raquel Castro,
Greta Viss, Clare Botterill, Maya
Brosch, Olivia Petrine, Aisha
Watt, Helen Bauer,
Carina Clark, Erica Grotegeer, Kaitlin
Heri, Kamryn Whitworth,
Sara Absten, Eleanor Davies, Alexa
Dietz, and Larisa Sulcs.
In addition to Bryant and Hammack, the women are represented by
Bailey Glasser's Lori Bullock in Des
Moines, IA, and Cary Joshi in
Washington, DC, along with
co-counsel Amber Eck and
Jenna Rangel of Haeggquist &
Eck, LLP, and David S. Casey, Jr.,
and Gayle Blatt of Casey Gerry in San
Diego.
Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 prohibits all
educational institutions that receive federal funds, including
SDSU, from discriminating on the basis of sex. It requires schools
to provide male and female student-athletes with equal
participation opportunities, athletic financial aid, and treatment,
and prohibits them from retaliating against anyone for challenging
sex discrimination at the school. In the SDSU case, the women are
suing for equal athletic financial aid, equal treatment, and
retaliation.
To see the court's decision, please click here.
For more information, contact:
Arthur Bryant, Bailey &
Glasser, LLP, (510) 507-9972, abryant@baileyglasser.com
Joshua Hammack, Bailey &
Glasser, LLP, (202) 463-2101, jhammack@baileyglasser.com
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SOURCE BAILEY & GLASSER, LLP