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Dem congresswoman indicted for ‘particularly selfish’ alleged theft of FEMA relief funds for campaign use

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Dem congresswoman indicted for ‘particularly selfish’ alleged theft of FEMA relief funds for campaign use

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A Miami grand jury indicted Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., on charges of allegedly stealing millions of dollars in disaster relief funds to make illegal campaign contributions, the Department of Justice said Wednesday.

According to the indictment, the Florida Democrat allegedly conspired to steal $5 million in Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) funds alongside her brother Edwin Cherfilus and numerous co-defendants.

Prosecutors alleged that the defendants routed the funds through multiple accounts to disguise their source and that a significant portion of the misappropriated funds were used as candidate contributions to Cherfilus-McCormick’s 2021 congressional campaign or for their personal benefit.

The Democrat could face up to 53 years in prison if convicted.

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UNEARTHED RECORDS TORPEDO CORI BUSH’S NEW CLAIM ABOUT ‘BILLIONS’ IN FUNDING SHE DELIVERED TO DISTRICT

Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormic was indicted by a Miami grand jury for allegedly stealing $5M in FEMA funds on Wed, Nov. 18, according to the Department of Justice. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images)

“Using disaster relief funds for self-enrichment is a particularly selfish, cynical crime,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement. “No one is above the law, least of all powerful people who rob taxpayers for personal gain. We will follow the facts in this case and deliver justice.”

Both Cherfilus-McCormick and her brother worked through their family healthcare company on a FEMA-funded COVID-19 vaccination staffing contract in 2021, according to the indictment. The company received an overpayment of $5 million in FEMA funds in July 2021, prosecutors alleged.

FBI Director Kash Patel immediately posted on X that Cherfilus-McCormick and her family “allegedly stole money from FEMA and then laundered it through friends toward her own personal benefits – including her campaign accounts.”

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DHS JUGGLES ‘MASS DEPORTATION’ PUSH WITH HELENE RELIEF, ADDS $124M AFTER BIDEN BACKLASH

Attorney General Pam Bondi referred to the alleged crimes as “particularly selfish.” (Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The indictment also states that Cherfilus-McCormick and Nadege Leblanc allegedly fixed contributions using straw donors and channeled funds from a FEMA-funded COVID-19 contract to their associates, who used it to make campaign donations.

Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., shared on X that he will be filing a motion to censure Cherfilus-McCormick and remove her from all committees.

“This is one of the most egregious abuses of public trust I have ever seen,” he asserted.

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The Republican Party of Florida, in an X post, immediately called on Cherfilus-McCormick to resign, writing, “This is absolutely disgusting. She must step down NOW!”

Cherfilus-McCormick’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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Rep. Steube, R-Fla., said he will be filing a motion to censure Cherfilus-McCormick and remove her from all committees. (Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The Howard University graduate was initially hit by a probe in 2023 by the House Ethics Committee, who investigated allegations of campaign finance violations tied to her 2022 elections.

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Cherfilus-McCormi was re-elected to a third term in Congress in 2024. She currently serves on the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs and the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

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South Carolina GOP lawmakers introduce bill to criminalize abortion as murder

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South Carolina GOP lawmakers introduce bill to criminalize abortion as murder

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South Carolina Republican lawmakers have introduced a new bill that would criminalize abortion as murder, applying existing homicide and wrongful death laws from the moment of conception.

The Prenatal Equal Protection Act, introduced in the South Carolina House of Representatives, would be the strongest anti-abortion law in state history if enacted. The legislation has been scheduled for a hearing in the South Carolina House Constitutional Laws Subcommittee on Wednesday.

Supporters argue current heartbeat laws merely regulate abortion and still allow the procedure in certain cases, prompting Republican state Sen. Lee Bright to introduce the legislation as a way to extend full legal protections to unborn children.

PRO-LIFE PREGNANCY CENTERS SEE CLIENT INCREASE AFTER SUPREME COURT DECISION: STUDY

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The South Carolina State House is seen in Columbia, South Carolina, where lawmakers are considering the Prenatal Equal Protection Act, a bill that would treat abortion as a homicide under state law. (LOGAN CYRUS/AFP via Getty Images)

“These children deserve equal protection. I will be filing a bill of equal protection today. I know we’ve got hearts and minds to change,” Bright said Tuesday at a press conference at the South Carolina State House.

South Carolina State Representative Rob Harris said that in 2023, the Legislature and the Governor revised the heartbeat law that regulates abortion and still allows the procedure under certain circumstances.

SUPREME COURT RULES AGAINST PLANNED PARENTHOOD IN MEDICAID FUNDING DISPUTE

South Carolina Sen. Lee Bright, R-Roebuck, spoke at a news conference about an abortion bill he is sponsoring on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

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“Incredibly, in one section of that bill, it asserts that life begins at conception, but in another section, it writes into law where, when, and how someone may legally murder a baby in South Carolina,” Harris said.

The legislation would apply to all parties involved, including the pregnant woman.

Republicans hold large majorities in both chambers of the South Carolina General Assembly, meaning the bill could pass if GOP lawmakers remain unified. But similar abortion legislation has previously stalled amid divisions within the GOP, raising questions about whether the bill can advance.

SENATE PARLIAMENTARIAN OKS BAN ON PLANNED PARENTHOOD FEDERAL FUNDING IN TRUMP MEGABILL

A November bill sought to further restrict abortion under existing law but stalled after some Republicans objected. The Prenatal Equal Protection Act goes much further, treating abortion as homicide from the moment of conception and applying criminal penalties, including for pregnant women — a shift supporters say is necessary to fully eliminate abortion.

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Supporters argue the earlier bill failed because it regulated abortion rather than abolishing it, and say incremental restrictions have repeatedly stalled or been struck down, leaving a full equal-protection approach as the only lasting solution.

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A protester held a sign during a news conference on an abortion bill at the South Carolina Statehouse on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2025, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

The new bill is backed by national anti-abortion activists who have warned Republican lawmakers they could face primary challenges if they do not support it.

Critics are expected to raise concerns about criminal penalties, enforcement and constitutional issues.

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Trans athlete’s lawyer avoids questions about West Virginia AG’s comments about sexual harassment allegations

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Trans athlete’s lawyer avoids questions about West Virginia AG’s comments about sexual harassment allegations

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American Civil Liberties Union attorney Joshua Block walked away from questions regarding a recent statement by West Virginia Attorney General John McCuskey addressing allegations of harassment against Block’s client, a transgender athlete from West Virginia. 

McCuskey, who is leading his state’s legal defense against the trans athlete after the athlete sued to block the state’s law to keep biological males out of girls’ sports, addressed the allegations at a news conference Monday. 

“Any time you think of a child being harassed, it gives you pause as a parent. And it isn’t really part of our case, but harassment of any child of any kind in this country is inappropriate. And it’s wrong, and we all need to stand up to ensure that children aren’t being harassed in any of their venues, particularly athletics,” McCuskey said. 

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Fox News Digital attempted to question Block about McCuskey’s statement after oral arguments for the case in the Supreme Court Tuesday, but Block walked away from the first wave of questioning to take a picture with his team and client.

After the photo op, Fox News Digital again pursued Block to inquire about McCuskey’s statement, but Block again walked away from the questions with assistants surrounding him. 

The allegations were leveled against the trans athlete by Bridgeport High School student Adaleia Cross, who was a track and field teammate of the trans athlete when the two were at Bridgeport Middle School.

Cross’ mother, Abby, told Fox News Digital what the trans athlete allegedly said to her daughter when they shared the girls’ locker room during the 2022-23 school year. Adaleia was in eighth grade, and the trans athlete was in seventh. Abby Cross alleges the trans athlete made graphic and vulgar sexual threats to her daughter and other girls on the team.

The trans athlete’s legal representatives at the American Civil Liberties Union denied the allegations. 

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“Our client and her mother deny these allegations, and the school district investigated the allegations reported to the school by A.C. and found them to be unsubstantiated. We remain committed to defending the rights of all students under Title IX, including the right to a safe and inclusive learning environment free from harassment and discrimination,” an ACLU statement provided to Fox News Digital said.

The Cross family’s attorneys at Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) responded to the ACLU’s statement.

“Our 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. As a result of the situation, [Cross] had to step away from the sport she loved entirely and sacrifice a key element of her school experience to protect herself,” an ADF statement provided to Fox News Digital said.

The trans athlete personally denied the allegations to The New York Times in a story published Monday.

“I was not raised like that,” the athlete said.

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TOP DEMS SILENT AFTER TRANS ATHLETE THEY BACKED IN SCOTUS CASE IS ACCUSED OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT, INTIMIDATION

The outlet obtained a letter from the Harrison County School District, stating an investigation determined Cross’ allegations “could not be substantiated.” 

The Cross family said when they reported the alleged harassment to the school, nothing was done to reprimand the trans athlete to their knowledge.

“They told me they would do a full investigation into what I told them,” Adaleia said. “And then, all of a sudden, it was like nothing else was happening. It was done, and it seemed like they thought nothing of it because they didn’t talk to us about it at all. They just left it there and didn’t tell us anything else. So, it just made it seem like, ‘Yup it’s done.’”

Her father, Holden Cross, said, “We received no response from the school after filing the report.”

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Fox News Digital made repeated requests to the ACLU and the Harrison County School District, which oversees Bridgeport Middle School and Bridgeport High School, seeking documentation related to the school’s investigation and clarification on whether an investigation occurred and, if so, why only the Cross family was not notified of the results. Those requests have not been met.

Meanwhile, former Lincoln Middle School girls track and field runner Emmy Salerno alleges the trans athlete used “intimidation tactics” against her after Salerno refused to compete against the trans athlete during an event in the 2024 spring season.

Salerno’s protest came on April 18, 2024, when she and the trans athlete were in eighth grade. Salerno, along with four other girls, refused to compete in the girls shot put competition that day at a local meet. Salerno claims her team was disqualified from the following meet and then began to face intimidating stares from the trans athlete at public events.

“After we stepped out, it was an immediate personality change. He didn’t want to talk to me. He just wanted to stare at me and just stare down,” Salerno told Fox News Digital. 

Salerno has also provided Fox News Digital a screenshot of a Snapchat post, which appeared to be sent by the trans athlete, showing a photo of Salerno with a caption that says, “Reminder that she has more testosterone than me.”

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Salerno said there was an incident in which the trans athlete followed her while they were at a local basketball game, making intimidating stares, and Salerno was concerned the trans athlete would try to “fight” her.

“At the basketball game when he just followed me everywhere, I kind of felt like, ‘Is he gonna try to fight me?’” Salerno said. “‘Is he going to try and sneak up behind me and punch me?’” 

Salerno and her father say they believe the stares, following patterns and social media posts were “intimidation tactics,” and there have been “lingering discomforts” stemming from the situation.

TRANS ATHLETE’S ATTORNEY SUGGESTS SEX SHOULD NOT BE DEFINED DURING SCOTUS TITLE IX CASE

Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court as it hears arguments over state laws barring transgender girls and women from playing on school athletic teams Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026, in Washington. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

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“I’ve always tried to avoid him everywhere I went,” Salerno added.

The ACLU has not responded to Fox News Digital’s request for a response to Salerno’s allegations. 

Salerno said she avoided competing against the trans athlete the following season, but rather than making a public protest, she told her coach not to include her in the lineup for the meets against the trans athlete to avoid a penalty to the team.

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Salerno claims she has also heard other girls in the community speak about the sexual harassment allegations made by Cross against the trans athlete. Salerno said she has never been in a locker room or bathroom with the trans athlete. 

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“Around track season, it gets more talked about,” Salerno said of the sexual harassment allegations. “I heard through my school, people were talking about it.” 

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Inside the SCOTUS hearing bound to be a turning point in the culture war over trans athletes in women’s sports

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Inside the SCOTUS hearing bound to be a turning point in the culture war over trans athletes in women’s sports

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Trained military snipers stood on the roof of the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday standing guard over a verbal battle between an alliance of women donning shirts that read XX-XY, against a hoard of pink, white and blue-painted activists, some wearing costumes, and some barely wearing anything. 

At one point, the convergence descended into harrowing cries of “Stop cutting off the breasts!” while the other side tried to drown it out with a blunt and repetitive chant of “Trans! Trans! Trans!” 

Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court as it hears arguments over state laws barring transgender girls and women from playing on school athletic teams, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026, in Washington. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

But inside the court chambers, one side was constantly in full retreat. 

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Attorneys for transgender athlete Lindsay Hecox argued to have the very lawsuit that they originally filed, Hecox v Little, dropped as moot now that it was being reviewed by the nation’s highest court. The suit, which was filed in 2020, blocked Idaho’s law to protect women’s sports and allowed Hecox to compete on Boise State’s women’s cross-country team.

And in a defining moment for the trans athlete legal team, it even had to retreat from one of the very arguments it used to try to get the case dropped. Cooley Legal attorney Kathleen Hartnett admitted that Hecox was “unlikely” to graduate in May after the firm previously argued that the athlete’s May graduation would render a ruling about Hecox’s athletic eligibility unnecessary. 

“She’s unlikely to graduate by May, as my friend said, but is hoping to make, through summer credits, to graduate in the fall,” Hartnett said just months after the firm filed a suggestion of mootness, in which Hecox stated, “I am currently enrolled in classes that may allow me to graduate as early as May 2026.”

Earlier in the hearing, Idaho Solicitor General Alan Hurst called out Hecox’s claimed graduation date of May as “not possible” after the state’s leadership did some back-door digging to discover Hecox’s status.

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“[Boise State] is a client of Idaho, we asked, and the university confirmed that it’s unlikely to happen in the spring,” Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) legal counsel John Bursch, who has worked with the Idaho and West Virginia AGs on the Supreme Court case, told Fox News Digital. “It just shows that throughout the case, Hecox has flipped back and forth.”

Idaho Attorney General Raul Labrador said that exposing the discrepancy was “important” to their arguments Tuesday. 

“I think it’s important. I don’t think it’s the main issue in the case, but I think it’s important,” Labrador told Fox News Digital. “They could have made that argument when we filed the petition for review … but they didn’t. They only did that after cir was granted.”

The plaintiffs appeared to retreat again during oral arguments for the second case. 

In that case, over a West Virginia trans teen who also sued to block a state law meant to keep males out of girls’ sports, American Civil LIberties Union (ACLU) attorney Joshua Block suggested that “sex” should not be defined.

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“I really urge the court not to do it on the definition of sex argument,” Block said, later adding. “I don’t think the purpose of Title IX is to have an accurate definition of sex. I think the purpose is to make sure that sex isn’t being used to discriminate by denying opportunities.”

But after grilling from Chief Justice John Roberts, who insisted sex “must mean something,” Block conceded that sex should be defined by biology for the sake of this case, but this case only.

“I think for this case, you can accept, for the sake of this case, that we’re talking about what they’ve termed to be biological sex,” he said. 

Fox News Digital asked Block what his definition of “sex” is, and he declined to give a definition.

“I don’t think that’s what, that’s what’s at issue in this case. What’s at issue in this case is fair treatment for all people, including cis people and trans people, and that’s what we’re hear to talk about to today,” Block answered.

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Fox News Digital attempted to ask Block why sex should not be defined in the case, but the attorney walked away and did not take any further questions.

Unlike the ADF, Idaho and West Virginia attorneys who stood in the courtyard of the Supreme Court and took multiple questions from reporters, and even kept offering questions when the press had nothing left to ask, Block and his ACLU colleagues only answered the singular question about defining sex after offering preprepared statements. 

Hartnett, whose previous claim to fame was helping a San Francisco man get a second-degree murder conviction vacated, said she was “proud” of her legal team’s efforts on Tuesday.

“I was particularly proud here today to be able that the court understood the serious discrimination the transgender community has faced,” Hartnett said. 

Just then, Lambda Legal CEO Kevin Jennings, who has co-counseled both cases, jumped in to loudly declare the West Virginia trans athlete “an American hero!”

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“Because she stood up for millions of other kids today and said ‘we belong, we matter, we are equal!’” Jennings shouted.

Jennings’ hesitation-less declaration of the West Virginia teen a hero came amid the backdrop of sexual harassment allegations that were leveled against the athlete prior to the hearing by former teammate Adaleia Cross. 

The ACLU denied the allegations in a previous statement to Fox News Digital. 

“Our client and her mother deny these allegations, and the school district investigated the allegations reported to the school by A.C. and found them to be unsubstantiated. We remain committed to defending the rights of all students under Title IX, including the right to a safe and inclusive learning environment free from harassment and discrimination,” the statement read.

The trans athlete then denied the allegations to The New York Times in a story that was published Monday, saying “I was not raised like that.” 

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Still, West Virginia Attorney General John McCuskey acknowledged the allegations at a press conference just one day before the hearing on Monday. 

“Any time you think of a child being harassed, it gives you pause as a parent. And it isn’t really part of our case, but harassment of any child of any kind in this country is inappropriate. And it’s wrong, and we all need to stand up to ensure that children aren’t being harassed in any of their venues, particularly athletics,” McCuskey said.

THE ATHLETES, COACHES, LAWMAKERS AND OFFICIALS WHO HAVE PICKED A SIDE IN THE SCOTUS WOMEN’S SPORTS BATTLE

When Fox News Digital attempted on Tuesday to ask Block about McCuskey’s statement, the attorney walked away, ignoring multiple questions. 

But the allegations would surface in greater and more emotional detail hours later.

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On Tuesday night, during the ADF Gala in Washington, D.C., to celebrate oral arguments, Cross’s mother Abby Cross took the stage and became visibly emotional as she recounted the details of the trans athlete’s alleged sexual harassment against her daughter.

Several individuals in attendance were seen crying, wiping tears from her eyes during the dialogue. 

Former San Jose State volleyball player Brooke Slusser, who unknowingly shared changing spaces and sleeping spaces with a biological male teammate in the 2023 season, was there and admitted she was one of those in attendance who shed tears during Abby Cross’s speech.

“It tugged at my heart. I mean, a lot of these things do, but it was hard to hear from a mother especially,” Slusser told Fox News Digital. “It’s awful. It brought tears to my eyes.”

Former North Carolina high school volleyball player Payton McNabb, who suffered permanent brain injuries after being spiked in the head by a trans opponent, said the alleged story made her “physically sick.”

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“Hearing that story honestly made me physically sick. This is exactly why we are fighting, because this is what is happening to young girls. It’s not a secret. People know this is happening, yet girls are being told to be quiet, to be inclusive, to accept harassment,” McNabb told Fox News Digital. 

“No girl, especially no child, should ever experience that. The fact that some people excuse it or even celebrate it is pure evil.”

But the mood of the event shifted as the night progressed amid optimistic messages by the “Save Women’s Sports” activists and attorneys, many of whom believed they walked away from Tuesday’s hearing with a definitive win. 

The consensus among pundits is that the Supreme Court justices and its conservative majority appear prepared to allow Idaho, West Virginia and other states across the U.S. to uphold its laws to keep biological males out of women’s and girls’ sports. 

Labrador shared in that optimism.

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“I think the arguments are on our side,” Labrador said. 

“I was actually surprised how the judges, who I assume are not going to be as friendly to our side, were really struggling with the questions that we’re going before the court, and they were trying to find a way to articulate the other side’s position, and even they were having a hard time articulating the other side’s position.” 

A decision is expected by this summer.

McCuskey has said he is optimistic that the court will rule 9-0 in favor of West Virginia and Idaho. Labrador expects a win, but believes 9-0 is too optimistic. 

In addition to a potential new legal precedent, the culture movement around the issue only appeared to gain more fuel on Tuesday. 

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XX-XY Athletics co-founder Jennifer Sey told Fox News Digital that the brand is now getting more than 30 brand ambassador applications per week from college athletes — a dramatic turnaround from the brand’s first year in 2024 when Sey had to be the one pursuing endorsers. 

Nowhere was the growing cultural movement more visible than the protest outside the court, which saw women from across the country who have spoken out about their experiences with transgender athletes, led by the likes of Slusser, McNabb and Riley Gaines. 

“It was definitely surreal,” Slusser said of the rally, who is eagerly awaiting resolution on the case, saying “the unknowing of what’s going to happen next and not getting an answer yet,” is hard for her.

Women’s fencer Stephenie Turner, who went viral for kneeling in protest of a trans athlete and getting disqualified for it last spring, was refreshed to be surrounded by so many people who agreed with her on the issue. 

“It was amazing to be in a room with people who are in agreement on common sense for the first time. Sometimes I feel like I’m going crazy on this issue when I talk to people who are on the fence about men and women’s sports, it’s nice to be in a room with people who are clear decisive language and know what, this is a zero-sum game and that we must be on the side of protecting women and girls,” Turner told Fox News Digital. 

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When looking at the pro-trans protesters they were clashing with, McNabb couldn’t help but wonder how they got to that point. 

“I didn’t interact with them directly, but watching from a distance was honestly sad,” McNabb said. “What stood out most to me was the number of women over there actively opposing their own rights — it’s completely bizarre.” 

Pro women’s golfer Lauren Miller, who spoke out against transgender golfer Hailey Davidson and helped prompt the first rule change in major pro women’s sports to protect the sport from biological males in late 2024, also felt mixed emotions seeing the other side on Tuesday.

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A protester drapes themselves in a transgender pride flag outside the Supreme Court as it hears arguments over state laws barring transgender girls and women from playing on school athletic teams, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026, in Washington. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP)

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“I’ve never seen anything like that before…. to face it directly and to see it, it really made me understand the weight of what we’re doing,” Miller told Fox News Digital. 

“I feel for them because they’ll never have the peace and the joy and the purpose that we have on our side… I really hope they can see the light because their world will be a lot better.”

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