Lawsuit challenges TSA's ban on transgender officers conducting pat-downs
Source: AP
Updated 8:42 PM EST, November 11, 2025
A Virginia transportation security officer is accusing the U.S. Department of Homeland Security of sex discrimination over a policy that bars transgender officers from performing security screening pat-downs, according to a federal lawsuit.
The Transportation Security Administration, which operates under DHS, enacted the policy in February to comply with President Donald Trumps executive order declaring two unchangeable sexes: male and female.
According to internal documents explaining the policy change that The Associated Press obtained from four independent sources, including one current and two former TSA workers, transgender officers will no longer engage in pat-down duties, which are conducted based on both the travelers and officers biological sex. In addition, transgender officers will no longer serve as a TSA-required witness when a traveler elects to have a pat-down conducted in a private screening area.
Until February, TSA assigned work consistent with officers gender identity under a 2021 management directive. The agency told the AP it rescinded that directive to comply with Trumps Jan. 20 executive order.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/transgender-tsa-trump-pat-downs-homeland-security-airport-c8cc93725cf71f02683e71e04d143141