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Female athletes from James Campbell High School score class certification after Ninth Circuit Appeal
Class Actions, Title IX Ashley LaFranchi Class Actions, Title IX Ashley LaFranchi

Female athletes from James Campbell High School score class certification after Ninth Circuit Appeal

When several students and parents from the girl’s water polo team flagged concerns of gender discrimination, the DOE retaliated against the class. The administration threatened to cancel the water polo season, increased scrutiny of the team, and mysteriously lost required team paperwork. This retaliatory conduct and the stark inequality between male and female athletes at Campbell are out of bounds under Title IX. In an upset, the District Court denied class certification in 2019 finding that the class failed to meet numerosity standards and, for the class-wide retaliation claims, that plaintiffs failed to show typicality and commonality.

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Eastern District of New York Grants Class Certification to Incarcerated People Who Faced Inhumane Conditions
Class Action Cert, Prisoners' Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington Class Action Cert, Prisoners' Rights Teddy Basham-Witherington

Eastern District of New York Grants Class Certification to Incarcerated People Who Faced Inhumane Conditions

Plaintiffs also alleged that MDC staff failed to provide them adequate food and clothing and deprived them of access to hot water for cleaning, bathing, and laundry. Plaintiffs were forced to wash themselves in their cell sinks with cold water or forego washing for fear of getting sick. One resident suffering from ulcerative colitis had bloody bedding that had not been changed because of the lack of laundry services. Other incarcerated people with chronic medical conditions did not receive their medication and were unable to receive medical treatment. Class members also reported not being able to use their CPAP machines, not having access to mental health staff, and even enduring dirty bandages that had not been changed in weeks.

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