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Judge Forces Women To Let Man Continue Living In Sorority House

Anastasia Boushee
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A judge has thrown out a lawsuit filed by six Wyoming sorority members who were being forced to let a man live in their house who repeatedly violated their boundaries.

In a shocking decision, U.S. District Court Judge Alan B. Johnson threw out the lawsuit on the grounds that the sorority’s bylaws do not define what a “woman” is — and he refused to move forward with his own definition.

“With its inquiry beginning and ending there, the court will not define a ‘woman’ today,” Johnson wrote, according to the New York Post.

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The lawsuit was filed against the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority by seven female students at the University of Wyoming after a man was allowed to join their sorority and even live in their house. The plaintiffs were asking for the court to revoke the membership of Artemis Langford, a male masquerading as a woman, and to provide them with unspecified damages.

According to the lawsuit, the women were forced to “reside in the same house as a 6’2″, 260-pound man who stares at them, asks about their intimate past, makes notes about their statements and takes photographs of them without their consent, and intimidates them by threatening to publicly label them bigots if they raise concerns.”

While the women were outraged by Kappa Kappa Gamma’s decision to allow Langford to join their sorority, they were kind enough to refer to him by the pseudonym “Terry Smith” in their lawsuit because they wanted “to spare Langford of threats and attacks, and hope to see Langford treated with kindness and respect.”

Despite clearly having the intent to throw the lawsuit out, and knowing that the women had tried to avoid naming the man in their lawsuit, the judge forced the women to dox themselves — ordering them “to reveal their names if they wanted to continue the lawsuit.”

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Even after six of the seven women gave in to his demand, the judge still dismissed the case — after the women had already subjected themselves to backlash from radical gender ideologues by revealing their names.

“The University of Wyoming chapter voted to admit — and, more broadly, a sorority of hundreds of thousands approved — Langford,” Johnson also said in his ruling, referring to the fact that the sorority has over 250,000 members across the U.S. and Canada.

The judge also claimed in his ruling that he “may not invade Kappa Kappa Gamma’s freedom of expressive association and inject the circumscribed definition Plaintiffs urge.”