Website ๐ https://u-s-news.com/
Telegram ๐ https://t.me/usnewscom_channel
OANโsย Brooke Mallory
3:31 PM โ Tuesday, November 14, 2023
Two sorority alumni who had advocated for membership to be limited to biological women only were kicked out of the organization.
Advertisement
The two alums, Patsy Levang and Cheryl Tuck-Smith, were members of Kappa Kappa Gamma at the University of Wyoming for over 50 years. They were informed that they had been expelled from the sorority after helping to fund and support a lawsuit that sought to remove transgender member Artemis Langford.
Langford has been accused numerous times of โpeepingโ on the other sorority sisters, secretly photographing them without their permission, and asking them specific details about their genitals and sex lives.
During the episode of FOX & Friends First, Allie Coghan, a plaintiff in the case and an alumni of Kappa Kappa Gamma, expressed her disappointment regarding the lawsuitโs aftermath on Monday.
โIt was really disappointing to hear that theyโre being dismissed because this is retaliation against women, and itโs supposed to be an organization meant for women,โ Coghan asserted.
โSo to hear that they didnโt want to see these brave women sticking up for us and supporting us, then, I mean, where are we supposed to go? Where are women supposed to go if a womenโs organizationย isnโt going to stick up for itself?โ
Former president of the Kappa Kappa Gamma National Foundation, Patsy Levang, expressed her sadness at the decision to be expelled from the group.
โMy heart was saddened when the current six council members voted me out. However, I will not be quiet about the truth,โ she said in a press release.
Tuck-Smith also expressed her disappointment and promised to inform people about the โdangersโ associated with inclusion, equity, and diversity.
โWe do not share information publicly about policy violations that may result in disciplinary action,โ a Kappa Kappa Gamma representative said when asked for comment.ย
Kappa Kappa Gamma had โapplaudedโ a federal court in Wyoming that dismissed a complaint against the group over a sororityโs ability to select its members.
The plaintiffโs inability to โmake any credible claimsโ and her hurling of accusations that were judged โunbefitting of a federal courtโ were reportedly the judgeโs grounds for rejection.
In March, the national organization was sued by former members of the University of Wyomingโs Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority for admitting 21-year-old Langford, a biological man who identifies as a transgender woman, into the group the previous year.
Langford had โbeen voyeuristically peeping on them while they were in intimate situations, and, in at least one occasion, had a visible erection while doing so,โ according to the sorority members. ย
May Mailman, Coghanโs attorney from the Independent Womenโs Law Center, accompanied her.
โThere the issue is going to be Kappaโs bylaws protect women. It says that only women can be members,โ Mailman said. โSo the big question for the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals is what is a woman? Do you know what a woman is? This is something that we donโt expect to be a very difficult legal brief to write. But we do hope that the 10th Circuit understands reality, has seen women around them, can spot one, understands what one is.โ
Stay informed! Receive breaking news blasts directly to your inbox for free. Subscribe here.ย https://www.oann.com/alerts