Sen. Greg Dolezal smiles as the Senate prepares to vote on his transgender sports bill. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder
The Georgia state Senate Thursday passed legislation banning transgender girls from playing on girls’ sports teams in schools along mostly party lines, and the bill’s sponsor also suggested that the body will take action to ban puberty-blocking drugs.
“The recognition of female sport is important because without a boundary around female sport that excludes male advantage, males would dominate every major sporting competition,” said sponsor Cumming Republican Greg Dolezal.
“The purpose is to include females by excluding males,” he added. “That’s part and parcel to the mere existence of female sport.”
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Speaker Jon Burns, right, prepares to announce his proposed transgender sports ban. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder
Senate Bill 1 passed 35-17, with Democratic Sens. Freddie Powell Sims of Dawson and Ed Harbison of Columbus joining their Republican colleagues in support.
Separately, House Speaker Jon Burns held a press conference Tuesday to unveil his chamber’s plan for a ban on transgender girls playing girls’ sports.
Before either bill can become law, it will need to pass both chambers by early April, and both Burns and Lt. Gov. Burt Jones will likely be jockeying to ensure their version is the one to experience the squiggle of Gov. Brian Kemp’s bill-signing pen.
Jones and Burns may have had a chance to hash out the differences on a recent trip. Both men were in Washington Wednesday as President Donald Trump signed an executive order that also seeks to ban transgender girls from playing girls’ sports.
All the attention has not been pleasant for many trans Georgians, who call recent sports bans and other legislative and executive actions a slap in the face.
“I was crying most of yesterday because I found out that the executive order was going to happen around 24 hours before it did, and then at that point I was like, oh my gosh, between that and SB1, basically everyone was trying to keep me from playing,” said Soju Hokari, a transgender Emory University student who plays ultimate, also known as ultimate Frisbee, for the school’s gender expansive and women’s team as well as for Atlanta Soul, a local semi-professional team.
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Hokari said under Trump’s executive order and the proposed state law, she could continue to play for Atlanta Soul but not at Emory. The bill would apply to interscholastic teams of all grade levels and colleges, both public colleges and private colleges that compete against public schools.
She said ultimate leagues emphasize gender inclusivity across all levels. In 2020 USA Ultimate adopted a gender inclusion policy with three divisions, men’s, women’s and mixed, but recommends that all organizers allow players to compete in whichever division they feel most comfortable with.
Hokari said the bill oversteps decisions made by leagues, which are closer to the specific needs of athletes than the state or federal government.
“I personally think that all trans athletes should just be able to play, but the leagues all have these mechanisms in place to try to have a sport-specific way of ensuring fairness and inclusion in their sports, and the problem with the law is that it’s trying to supersede that by being like, ‘actually, we know better than these individual sports.’”
Sen. Kim Jackson listens to arguments in the Senate over a ban on transgender sports ban. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder
Democrats called the bill a solution in search of a problem, arguing that transgender people make up less than 1% of the state’s population and an even smaller subset of transgender Georgians are student athletes.
Republicans often cite swimmer Riley Gaines, the namesake of the House bill, who became an icon for the movement against transgender participation in girls’ sports after she and other swimmers competed against and shared a locker room with a transgender woman at a 2022 championship held at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
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The NCAA changed its eligibility rules after that competition following numerous complaints.
Stone Mountain Democratic Sen. Kim Jackson offered an amendment she said would have addressed issues that are more likely to prevent girls from playing sports than transgender competitors. The bill called for measures like equalizing pay for coaches and requiring equal access to fields and equipment for girls’ and boys’ teams.
In a floor debate, Democrats said the bill could lead to challenges over cisgender female athletes who may not look conventionally feminine, or that it could require transgender boys, who may appear masculine and have bigger muscles because of testosterone injections, to play on girls’ teams.
Sen. Greg Dolezal, right, debates his transgender sports bill with Sen. Derek Mallow. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder
“So then a trans boy will now compete in girls’ sports?” asked Savannah Democratic Rep. Derek Mallow.
“A trans girl – a trans boy – a female. Let’s take the trans thing off. Let’s speak to this in terms of biology, in terms of females,” Dolezal said. “Females will compete in female sport, and males will compete in male sport. I believe there are other bills that currently do address or will address the puberty blockers or even the injection of testosterone.”
“That’s not what the core of this bill discusses or contemplates,” he added. “I think we may see some downstream changes that might even change the reality or potential for what you’re talking about.”
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Savannah Republican Sen. Ben Watson has filed a bill that would ban the use of puberty blockers or hormone therapy on minors.
Both versions of the ban specify that people assigned male at birth cannot play on interscholastic teams for people assigned female at birth, but girls would be allowed to play on boys’ teams under some circumstances. They also specify that schools must maintain separate locker facilities for either gender and outline methods to complain for athletes who feel their rights have been infringed.
Frontline Policy, an influential evangelical conservative lobbying group, made an expanded transgender sports ban a top priority. Speaking after Burns’ press conference Tuesday, Frontline founder and president Cole Muzio said he’s neutral between the House and Senate bills.
“We just want girls protected in the state of Georgia, and I think the House has done a great job with this piece of legislation, very close to what we’ve advocated for,” he said. “The Senate, I know has been working hard on this, and I think there’s unity in this building between the governor’s office, the Speaker of the House and the Senate. Good language is going to pass, so we’re excited to see what happens.”
Senior reporter Stanley Dunlap contributed to this report.
Bulldogs score three touchdowns in final stanza, will move up in CFP rankings
Georgia dominated the fourth quarter in a top-10 matchup with Texas en route to a 35-10 win and a huge addition to its College Football Playoff resume. (Hyosub Shin/AJC)
ATHENS — Georgia football shined bright under the lights, dominating Texas in the fourth quarter en route to the 35-10 win.
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The Bulldogs (9-1, 7-1 SEC) figure to move up from No. 5 in the College Football Playoff ranking on Tuesday night.
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Mike is in his eighth season covering SEC and Georgia athletics for AJC-DawgNation and has 30 years of collegiate sports multimedia experience, 25 of them in the SEC including beat writer stops at Auburn, Alabama, Tennessee and now Georgia. Mike was named the National FWAA Beat Writer of the Year in January, 2018.
Mike is in his eighth season covering SEC and Georgia athletics for AJC-DawgNation and has 30 years of collegiate sports multimedia experience, 25 of them in the SEC including beat writer stops at Auburn, Alabama, Tennessee and now Georgia. Mike was named the National FWAA Beat Writer of the Year in January, 2018.
A Georgia player has won an estimated $980 million Mega Millions jackpot on Friday, the eighth-largest prize in the game’s history, according to the lottery.
The winning ticket matched all six winning numbers: 1, 8, 11, 12, 57, and Mega Ball 7.
The win ends a 40-drawing streak without a jackpot winner, making it the first time since June that the top prize has been claimed. In that previous drawing, a Virginia ticket won $348 million.
The winner can choose to receive the $980 million in annual payments over 30 years, or a lump-sum cash payout of $452.2 million, all before taxes.
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The winning ticket was sold at a Publix supermarket in Newnan, a city roughly 40 miles southwest of Atlanta, according to the lottery. The store will receive a $50,000 retailer bonus from the Georgia Lottery for selling the jackpot ticket, the lottery said.
“We are thrilled to congratulate the largest winner in our state’s history,” Georgia Lottery President and CEO Gretchen Corbin said in the news release.
This is the largest Mega Millions prize since the game’s overhaul in April, which raised ticket prices to $5 and increased the starting jackpot to $50 million. Under the new system, the odds of winning the jackpot are now 1 in 290 million, according to the lottery.
In the latest drawing, a ticket sold in Michigan won $3 million by matching all five white balls and the 3X multiplier, the lottery said. Another 22 tickets matched four white balls and the Mega Ball, winning $20,000.
The Mega Millions’ record jackpot stands at $1.6 billion, claimed by a single ticket sold in Florida in August 2023.
The leader of the Prosecuting Attorneys Council of Georgia says that he will step in to replace Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis in the Georgia election interference case against President Trump and others.
PAC Executive Director Peter J. Skandalakis made the announcement on Friday, which was the deadline set by the judge overseeing the case to find Willis’s replacement.
In his announcement, Skandalakis said that he will take up the case after his organization was unable to find another prosecutor by Friday.
“Several prosecutors were contacted and, while all were respectful and professional, each declined the appointment,” he wrote. “Out of respect for their privacy and professional discretion, I will not identify those prosecutors or disclose.”
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Skandalakis said that he chose to lead the prosecution due to his familiarity with some of the immense case file, which he described as more than 100 banker boxes of documents and an 8-terabyte hard drive. Though he attempted to examine the evidence and interviews in the time the judge allotted him, he said he was not able to complete a full review.
“With Judge McAfee’s deadline now upon us and my review still ongoing, I have determined that the best course of action is to appoint myself to the case,” Skandalakis wrote. “This will allow me to complete a comprehensive review and make an informed decision regarding how best to proceed.”
With Skandalakis as the prosecutor, he now has the choice whether to continue the path Willis had taken, pursue only some charges, or dismiss the case entirely.
While it is unlikely that any action against Mr. Trump could proceed while he is the sitting president, there are 14 other people still facing charges in the case, including former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and former New York mayor and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani.
In a statement to CBS News, attorney Steve Sadow, who is representing Mr. Trump in the case, said that the “politically charged prosecution has come to an end.”
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“We remain confident that a fair and impartial review will lead to a dismissal of the case against President Trump,” Sadow said.
How Georgia’s Trump election case began
Willis announced the indictment against Trump and 18 others in August 2023, using Georgia’s anti-racketeering law to accuse them of participating in a scheme to overturn Trump’s narrow 2020 election loss to Joe Biden in Georgia.
The alleged plot included Trump’s call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, urging him to “find” enough votes to reverse the outcome. Four defendants: attorneys Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, Kenneth Chesebro, and bail bondsman Scott Hall have pleaded guilty.
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis looks on during a hearing at the Fulton County Courthouse on March 1, 2024, in Atlanta.
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Alex Slitz / Getty Images
Willis was disqualified from prosecuting the case after revelations that she had a romantic relationship with Nathan Wade, the special prosecutor she hired to lead the investigation.
Defense attorneys alleged that Willis and Wade benefited from their relationship, saying Wade used his earnings from the case to pay for trips they took together. Willis and Wade acknowledged the relationship but said it began after he was hired.
In March 2024, Judge McAfee rebuked Willis for a “tremendous lapse in judgment” but said there was no conflict of interest that would disqualify her. He ruled she could stay on the case if Wade resigned, which he did hours later.
The defense attorneys appealed, and in December, the Georgia Court of Appeals removed Willis from the case, citing an “appearance of impropriety.” The state’s high court declined to hear Willis’ appeal in September, placing the case in the hands of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council.
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While Trump announced pardons for people accused of backing his efforts to overturn the results of that election earlier this week — including those charged in Georgia — that doesn’t affect state charges.