A federal judge in New Hampshire is on the side of a local school district to prevent parents from using braccas in school property in support of biological sports only for girls.
In September, the parents carried “XX” bracelets of pink that door to a secondary school soccer game where the transgender athlete Parker Tirrell, now 16 years old, was playing in an opposite team. The bracelets referred to the sex chromosomes associated with biological females.
The protest led to the Superintendent of the school districts of Bow and Dunbarton, Marcy Kelley, issued a transfer notice against the parents Anthony and Nicole Fote, along with Kyle Fellers and Eldon Rash, according to the New Hampshire Journal.

Parker Tirrell, a transgender athlete who plays in the Women’s Soccer Team of High School, practices at the entrance of his family home on Friday, March 7, 2025 in Plymouth, New Hampshire. (AP Photo/Charles Kupa)
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Then, the parents sedated the school district, claiming that their rights of the first amendment were violated. Although the orders of non -participation have expired since then, they asked the judge to allow them to carry signs and use the bracelets with the symbol of female chromosomes in school events while the case was processed.
On Monday, the judge of the United States District Court, Steven Mcauliffe, President George Hw Bush designated, ruled that the district acted reasonably in his decision to prevent parents from protesting.
Mcauliffe said that the intentions of “harmless harmless” of parents “were not as important as the broader context, and that adults who attend an athletic event of high school are not ORPY messages protected by the first amendment. Messages.

The transgender athlete Parker Tirrell with a football ball.
“While the plaintiffs can never have the intention of communicating a degrading or stalker message aimed at Parker Tirrell or other transgender students, the symbols and the posters they showed were totally able to transmit video,” hey. “And that broader message is what school authorities reasonably understood and tried to prevent.”
“The broader and degrading/stalker message that the school district understood the” XX “plaintiffs that the symbols transmit was, in context, completely reasonable,” Mcauliffe wrote.
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Fellers and Fote testified that they did not intend to harass or attack a transgender player in the opposite team, but the school district said differently. The group of parents had not protested in any previous game.
In the days before the game, another father told school officials that he had heard others talk about talking about appearing in the game with dresses and disturbing the transgender player.
“When we suspect there is some kind of threat.
In February, the parents asked the Court to govern that they allowed us to use pink bracelets in the spring games to protest against the transgender athletes competing in girls sports. His preliminary injection application was denied, and the court has not yet declared about the request to use pink bracelets in all school sporting events, according to the Concord monitor.

President Donald Trump signs the executive order of No Men In Women’s Sports in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 5, 2025. The order seeks to prohibit transgender girls and women from competing in sports equipment that coincide with their gender identity. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP)
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Del Kolde, a main lawyer of the Institute for Freedom of Decision and one of the lawyers who represent the parents, said he does not agree with the opinion of the court issued for denying his request for a preliminary injury.
“This was an adult speech in a limited public forum, which enjoys greater protection of the first amendment than the students’ speech in the classroom,” Kolde said in a statement at the exit. “Bow school district officials were obviously discriminated against the point of view because they perceived that the XX wrist bands were ‘trans-excuid’.”
After the ruling was issued, the plaintiffs filed a notice saying that they do not intend to submit more evidence before the judge made a final decision.
The decision occurs only one week after President Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed at prohibiting transgender athletes participating in girls and women’s sports.
Ryan Morik de Fox News, Paulina Dedaj, Landon Mion, Jackson Thompson and Associated Press contributed to this report.