
BATON ROUGE — Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill has joined a letter urging the National Collegiate Athletic Association to restore to female athletes the records, titles, awards and recognitions they earned but were denied because of policies that allowed biological males to compete in female categories.

Murrill
“Biological men do not belong in women’s sports,” Murrill said. “This was always unfair, and the NCAA should give these women back the records, recognition and awards they were wrongfully denied.”
Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch led the effort.
“Female collegiate athletes trained, competed, and triumphed only to see their recognitions stripped away and devalued by unfair policies that ignored biology,” Fitch said. “I am grateful to be joined by my colleagues from across the country and the Trump administration as we support these women and urge that their records be corrected, restoring the honors they earned.”
West Virginia Attorney General J.B. McCuskey also signed the letter.
“Biological men should have never been allowed to compete against biological women in the first place,” McCuskey said. “But thankfully, we are starting to see the country and our policies turn back to a place where women’s rights matter.
“Restoring these records to these women is the least schools can do to return what was stolen from them. This is the right thing to do.”
In the letter, the AGs say the policies that were “created, promoted and encouraged” by the Biden Administration and the NCAA not only enabled biological men to compete against women in sporting events across the country, but “denied deserving women the recognitions they had earned in events that you managed.”
“While we appreciate the steps the NCAA has taken since then, there is far more the NCAA can do for the women athletes that have competed and continue to compete in your events,” the letter states. “The NCAA should take this step for former athletes to preserve the integrity of Title IX and show your support for the women harmed by years of bad policy.
“As your website states, ‘Regardless of where they start, student-athletes strive to end each season at one of the NCAA’s 90 championships in 24 sports.’ Women athletes strived, succeeded, and were cheated of what they earned.”
President Donald Trump has been signed executive orders supporting women’s sports and prioritizing Title IX. In February, the U.S. Department of Education also penned a letter asking the NCAA to validate these recognitions.
In addition to Murrill and McCuskey, attorneys general from the following states also joined the letter: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Guam, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming.