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Inside San Jose State's police battle to protect women's athletes threatened by a transgender culture war

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Inside San Jose State's police battle to protect women's athletes threatened by a transgender culture war

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Brooke Slusser was enjoying a normal night on campus when she got the first-ever threat against her life.

It was Oct. 2, she was just hours away from traveling to play a college volleyball game for her San Jose State Spartans at Colorado State. But then, before she drifted to sleep that night, a teammate ran to her with an urgent warning. 

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“One of my teammates got a DM, basically saying that she, and then my team, needed to keep my distance from me on gameday against Colorado State, because it wasn’t going to be a good situation for me to be in and that my team needed to keep their distance,” Slusser told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview. “They needed to keep their distance from me during the game, because something was going to happen to me.

“This was the first physical threat when we could easily see that they wanted to physically harm one of us.”

It was the first time she had ever experienced anything like that, she said. Brooke was just a college junior from Denton, Texas – a town with historically conservative political leanings and an exceptionally low violent crime rate. 

But she wasn’t in Texas anymore. She was in California. 

Police behind the San Jose State University Spartans bench monitor Moby Arena during an NCAA Mountain West women’s volleyball game between the Spartans and the Colorado State Rams in Fort Collins, Colorado, on Thursday, October 3, 2024. (Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

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Unlike Texas, California is a state where there are no laws to prevent transgender inclusion in college sports. After finding out that one of her teammates was a transgender female, and she had not even been notified of it despite sharing a locker room and even rooms on overnight trips with that person, she joined a lawsuit against the NCAA. 

Blaire Fleming, San Jose State’s transgender player who has continued to play this season amid the lawsuit, joined the program the same year as Slusser did in 2022. They played two full seasons together without Slusser ever being informed that Fleming was a biological male.

Slusser alleged that San Jose State had not warned any of its recruits that it had a transgender athlete on the team, even though “this was now a well-known fact to the athletic department and virtually everyone else at SJSU,” when she joined the lawsuit, headed by former college swimmer and OutKick host Riley Gaines, in May. 

And suddenly, in a heated election year, Slusser, Fleming and their teammates were thrust into the spotlight of national-scale partisan debate between gender identity rights and the sanctity of women’s sports.

Because of this, Slusser now has to be even more concerned for her physical safety. 

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Brooke Slusser is a junior at San Jose State university who plays volleyball and has joined a lawsuit against the NCAA. (Courtesy of San Jose State athletics)

“If they are willing to make a threat in that way, they’re definitely some sort of pro-transgender beliefs, but I wouldn’t be able to 100 percent say if they’re a transgender activist or not,” Slusser said when asked about the potential motivations behind the threat.

Slusser swiftly reported the incident. The team already had a regular security guard that traveled with the players for home and away games, but that wasn’t going to be enough anymore. 

“No matter what people’s opinions are, whether they want to support not allowing trans in the NCAA, or if they do support that, whatever they think, there obviously are two sides to having me on the team and having Blaire on the team, so it’s just this fear that you never even know what people are going to do these days,” Slusser said. 

So, the team turned to armed security.

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Even before that threat, the program was already in the process of bolstering its protection as it garnered more and more national attention. 

When Southern Utah became the first program to announce that it would be forfeiting its match against the Spartans in early September, that was the first indicator for heightened security. That’s when the college pulled the trigger on bringing in reinforcements.

A San Jose State University spokesperson, in liaison with the police department, confirmed to Fox News Digital that the volleyball team was told it would be getting added security of some kind after its first cancelation by an opposing program, as news of Slusser’s lawsuit spread. It would only be the first of four official forfeits and one more that is disputed.

Shortly after that first cancelation, the university’s in-house police department, UPD, was alerted of the situation and got involved. 

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San Jose State confirmed to Fox News Digital that there was some campus police presence in the Spartan Gym at Yosh Uchida Hall for the team’s next two home matches against San Francisco on Sept. 19 and St. Mary’s on Sept. 21.

The university’s police department annually documents about 60,000 incidents, arrests between 800 and 900 suspects and writes about 2,500 reports. The Police Communications Center dispatches personnel to more than 50,000 calls for service each year, according to the station’s website.

San Jose State Senior Director of Media Relations Michelle Smith McDonald previously told Fox News Digital that diverting the department’s resources to the volleyball team was needed due to the “attention” the team was getting. 

“The team has been a subject of significant attention, not all of it positive, and we are ensuring their security,” Smith McDonald said. 

The department had to call for more backup when the team hit the road. 

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After the Spartans’ homestand, a university police officer traveled with the team to its September 24 match at Fresno State. But San Jose State confirmed that it had to coordinate with Fresno State to have additional security on site for that match to back up the one traveling officer.

San Jose State then had a gap in its schedule after Boise State forfeited its game against it on Sept. 28. The University of Wyoming and Utah State also forfeited their matches against the Spartans around the same time, bringing the grand total of forfeits up to four, with each one bringing more divisive attention to the team. 

Then things were noticeably different when Slusser and her teammates arrived at Colorado State on October 3, after the threat against her life. The Spartans walked onto a court under a much heavier and more noticeable patrol by police officers.

The San Jose State University Spartans are flanked by Moby Arena security, campus police and their own private guard during an NCAA Mountain West women’s volleyball game against the Colorado State University Rams at Moby Arena in Fort Collins, Colorado, on Thursday, October 3, 2024.

“The added protection at Colorado State was because of that DM,” Slusser said, referring to the first threat against her life. 

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“Especially with how much people have reached out on social media making threats and saying they want to meet up with me or Blaire and any of our teammates to confront us on this whole situation. So, I think the security is mostly just to be on the safer side of things to make sure that doesn’t happen, especially while we’re on away trips, and people think that might be their chance to do whatever they want to do in that moment.”

But Slusser added that she was “not aware” of any similar threats that have been made against Fleming. The university has not confirmed or denied any alleged threats made against Fleming. Fox News Digital has reached out to Fleming through the university for comment, but has not received a response. 

Blaire Fleming, a redshirt senior at San Jose State University, plays as an outside and right-side hitter on the women’s volleyball team. (San Jose State University)

Meanwhile, the agitator who made the threat against Slusser ahead of the Colorado State game has not yet been identified. 

Fox News Digital provided a series of questions to San Jose State about the measures it is taking to track down the suspects of these threats, including whether digital forensics by the university police department is being used, or whether the situation has been elevated to state or federal investigators. 

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“The university has asked students and staff to share all concerning communications with UPD to be evaluated and addressed appropriately, including in conjunction with proper authorities where appropriate,” said part of a statement that San Jose State provided exclusively to Fox News Digital in response to the list of questions. 

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San Jose State would not confirm any specific details of the police department’s security protocols. 

However, the university did confirm that the volleyball team will continue to get police protection for future home and away matches. 

“The safety and security of our students is our top priority. The university is providing security through the UPD both at home and on the road,” the university’s statement read. 

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For Slusser, that armed protection puts her at peace of mind as she maneuvers the dangers that have come with her recent decision to take a stand against transgender inclusion in women’s sports. 

“At Colorado State for our game, I was definitely looking around a lot more to make sure there was security, just because I didn’t feel safe. So, I think honestly it makes me feel better about being able to travel and show up to places, knowing there is extra security,” Slusser said. “I do hope that there is kind of the same presence at our other away games this season.”

San Jose State junior Brooke Slusser is from Texas and started her college career at the University of Alabama. (Courtesy of San Jose State Athletics.)

Slusser added that the police protection is only notable on game days and road trips, and that they aren’t getting any protection in their “day-to-day” routines. 

Still, if the UPD continues its protection of the team, as is expected, it will embark on a security escort that could be under a heated national spotlight later this month. 

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San Jose State has a daunting road trip coming up against the University of Nevada, Reno, on October 26. It is a match that is currently scheduled to be played, but Nevada players have expressed their intent not to play that match. 

Nevada provided a statement to Fox News Digital confirming that the team’s players have approached the athletics director requesting that the game be canceled. The Nevada players themselves have spoken out about their intent to forgo participation, but the university also said that players who choose not to participate won’t face consequences for skipping it, in its statement. 

GOP Senate candidate Sam Brown, left, poses with Nevada’s Sia Liilii, center right, and former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, after Liillii reiterated her team’s intent not to play its game against San Jose State amid an ongoing controversy over a transgender player on the team. (Sam Brown Campaign)

However, Nevada’s statement also claimed that the program could not officially forfeit the match without violating state law. The state’s constitution was revised in 2022 when Nevada voted to adopt the Equal Rights Amendment, which added gender identity to the list of protections. 

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That means Slusser, Fleming and the rest of their team could all end up having to get on a plane to Reno, in a Sun Belt battleground state just weeks before a hotly contested election where transgender inclusion in women’s sports is suddenly a red-hot issue. And there might be no opposing players to greet them on the court when they get there. 

The University of Nevada’s reported incidents of aggravated assault went from four cases on campus in 2021 to three in 2022 to five last year, according to the school’s released annual crime statistics.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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Texans defense suffocates Aaron Rodgers, Steelers in playoff win

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Texans defense suffocates Aaron Rodgers, Steelers in playoff win

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Crunch.

That was the sound of Houston Texans players colliding with Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers early in the fourth quarter of their Wild Card Round matchup, causing him to lose the ball. Texans defensive lineman Sheldon Rankins picked the ball up and ran it to the end zone for what felt like the knockout blow even though there was still a lot of time left to play.

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) loses possession of the ball while being tackled by Houston Texans defensive end Danielle Hunter (55) during the second half of an NFL wild-card playoff football game, Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Justin Berl)

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It was that type of game for both teams – a defensive struggle – as Houston put together a 30-6 victory. It was the franchise’s first road playoff victory.

There were big hits and little room for error. Houston had a 7-6 lead at halftime thanks to a touchdown pass from C.J. Stroud to Christian Kirk.

Even as the Texans turned the ball over three times between the first half and the third quarter, the Steelers could only muster up three points. Houston’s defensive prowess was on display on each snap as Rodgers was left with little to no time to make a decision.

When he did have time to throw, wide receivers like DK Metcalf, Jonnu Smith and Calvin Austin III either dropped the ball or were just a hair off. Rodgers also had a few of his passes deflected.

Houston Texans wide receiver Christian Kirk (13) runs to the end zone for a touchdown while defended by Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Brandin Echols (26) during the first half of an NFL wild-card playoff football game, Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Justin Berl)

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Steelers fans let the team hear it with plenty of boos. Pittsburgh extended its playoff losing streak to seven games.

Texans running back Woody Marks ran for 100 yards for the first time in his career and scored a touchdown to really seal the win. Texans defensive back Calen Bullock returned an interception for a touchdown late in the game.

Stroud finished 21-of-32 with 250 passing yards and the touchdown pass. The Texans’ defense sacked Rodgers four times. Rankins was good for 1.5 sacks.

The Steelers almost had no offense throughout the game. The team was held to 175 yards and outscored 23-0 in the fourth quarter.

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Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud throws during the first half of NFL wild-card playoff football game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Pittsburgh.  (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

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Houston will take on the New England Patriots in the AFC Divisional Round.

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Luka Doncic scores 42 points, but poor defense dooms Lakers in loss to Kings

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Luka Doncic scores 42 points, but poor defense dooms Lakers in loss to Kings

Lakers coach JJ Redick was asked before Monday’s game against the Sacramento Kings how he could ensure his players wouldn’t underestimate a nine-win team.

“We don’t look at any game as a walkover,” Redick said.

Then the Kings walked all over the Lakers, taking a 20-point lead in the third quarter before winning 124-112 at Golden 1 Center.

Luka Doncic did his best to keep the Lakers in the game, scoring 42 points and collecting eight assists and seven rebounds. But he scored just two points in the fourth quarter and looked slower after having his left thigh wrapped at the end of the third quarter.

The Lakers got to within seven points in the fourth, but the Kings pulled away. DeMar DeRozan scored 32 points and Russell Westbrook finished with 22 points and seven assists for the Kings (10-30), who shot 59% from the field (48-82) and made 17 three-pointers.

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LeBron James, who scored 22 points, wore a patch on his jersey commemorating his unprecedented 23rd NBA season in the city where he played his first NBA game. It features a silhouette of his pregame chalk toss and three colored stripes that represents the three franchises he has played on — the Lakers, Cavaliers and Heat.

He will wear the patch for the remainder of the season. After each game, the patch will be removed from his jersey, dated and shipped to a Topps’ production facility to be authenticated and inserted into a pack of trading cards.

LeBron James wears a special patch on his jersey commemorating his unprecedented 23rd NBA season.

(Justine Willard / Associated Press)

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The Lakers (23-14) looked strong from the onset when Deandre Ayton won the jump ball and eventually threw a lob pass to James for a 2-0 Lakers lead, a play that has become something the Lakers have used several times to start a game.

James hit his first four shots and the Lakers took an 8-2 lead before everything started to crumble.

They were behind 59-43 late in the second quarter. They couldn’t stop Malik Monk, who had 18 points off the bench on six-for-eight shooting, including five for six from three-point range. Monk finished with 26 points.

After the hot start, James finished the first half going five for 12 from the field for 12 points. He finished the game shooting eight for 17.

Lakers star LeBron James, right, drives against Sacramento Kings forward Precious Achiuwa.

Lakers star LeBron James, right, drives against Sacramento Kings forward Precious Achiuwa during the first half Monday. James finished with 22 points.

(Justine Willard / Associated Press)

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The Lakers will play the Atlanta Hawks on Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena. When the Lakers played a back-to-back game last week, James sat out the second game. Will he do the same Tuesday?

“We’ll see how he feels in the morning,” Redick said.

Perhaps Rui Hachimura will make his return from right calf soreness. He was available to play Monday, but he sat out his seventh consecutive game.

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LSU, Lane Kiffin set to land star quarterback in transfer portal: report

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LSU, Lane Kiffin set to land star quarterback in transfer portal: report

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LSU Tigers football is reportedly set to land a coveted transfer on Monday to start Lane Kiffin’s tenure as head coach.

Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt will likely transfer to the Tigers and play in Baton Rouge next season, ESPN reported. Leavitt is one of the top quarterbacks in the transfer portal and reportedly visited Miami and Kentucky en route to his decision.

ASU Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) scrambles away from Houston Cougars defensive lineman Eddie Walls III (90) at Mountain America Stadium in Tempe on Oct. 25, 2025. (Joe Rondone/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

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LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier graduated following the 2025 season and Michael Van Buren transferred to South Florida upon Kiffin’s arrival at LSU from Ole Miss. LSU was reportedly also targeting Washington’s Desmond Williams Jr. before he chose to stay with the Huskies.

Leavitt initially transferred from Michigan State to Arizona State following his freshman season in 2023. He became a star under Kenny Dillingham’s tutelage and had the Sun Devils in the College Football Playoff in 2024, only losing to the Texas Longhorns by eight points in the first round.

He only played in seven games in 2025, throwing for 1,628 yards and 10 touchdowns before he suffered a foot injury that required season-ending surgery.

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Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at Mountain America Stadium on Oct. 18, 2025. (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)

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Upon Leavitt’s decision to enter the transfer portal, Dillingham had warm words for him.

“Big 12 champ, put his name on the map, smart/talented player! Going to succeed wherever he goes,” Dillingham wrote on X in December.

LSU had high expectations for the 2025 season. But the team was only able to muster seven wins. The team fired Brian Kelly in the middle of the year.

LSU head coach Lane Kiffin, left, stands next to Louisiana State Tigers athletic director Verge Ausberry, right, prior to the game against the Houston Cougars at NRG Stadium on Dec. 27, 2025. (Maria Lysaker/Imagn Images)

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Kiffin joined LSU after Ole Miss won its Egg Bowl rivalry game against Mississippi State. The Rebels made the College Football Playoff and got to the semifinals.

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