Transgender student Marcy Rheintgens arrest for violating Florida bathroom law may be first of its kind

A transgender college student declared, “I am here to break the law” before entering a women’s restroom at the Florida Capitol and being led out in handcuffs by police.Civil rights attorneys say the arrest of Marcy Rheintgen last month is the first they know of for violating transgender bathroom restrictions passed by numerous state legislatures across the country.Capitol police had been alerted and were waiting for Rheintgen, 20, when she entered the building in Tallahassee on March 19.They told her she would receive a trespass warning once she entered the women’s restroom to wash her hands and pray the Rosary, but she was later placed under arrest when she refused to leave, according to an arrest affidavit.Rheintgen faces a misdemeanor trespassing charge punishable by up to 60 days in jail and is due to appear in court in May.“I wanted people to see the absurdity of this law in practice,” Rheintgen told the Associated Press.

“If I’m a criminal, it’s going to be so hard for me to live a normal life, all because I washed my hands.Like, that’s so insane.”At least 14 states have adopted laws barring transgender women from entering women’s bathrooms at public schools and, in some cases, other government buildings.

Only two — Florida and Utah — criminalize the act.A judge on Wednesday temporarily blocked Montana’s new bathroom law.Rheintgen’s arrest in Florida is the first that American Civil Liberties Union attorneys are aware of in any state with a criminal ban, senior staff attorney Jon Davidson said.Rheintgen was in town visiting her grandparents when she decided to pen a letter to each of Florida’s 160 state lawmakers, informing them of her plan to enter a public restroom inconsistent with her sex assigned at birth.

The Illinois resident said her act of civil disobedience was fueled by anger at seeing a place she loves and visits regularly grow hostile toward trans people.“I know that you know in your heart that this law i...

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Publisher: New York Post

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