Girl who was allegedly sexually harassed by trans athlete in SCOTUS case speaks out after ruling

For Adaleia Cross, the Supreme Court’s ruling in the West Virginia women’s sports case was not just a legal victory.It was personal.Cross, a Bridgeport High School student in West Virginia, said the ruling gave her a “sense of peace” after years of speaking out about the transgender athlete at the center of the case.Cross has alleged the athlete made comments to her in the girls’ locker room that amounted to sexual harassment when both were students at Bridgeport Middle School.Fox News Digital is not naming the trans athlete because the athlete is a minor.“I definitely have a sense of peace about all of it,” Cross told Fox News Digital after the ruling.
“Although I had to go through all of that, and it doesn’t make up for what I had to go through, I know that other girls can be protected, like my sister and my friends who are still on the team.”Cross also sent a message to the athlete in the wake of the ruling.“Jesus Christ loves [the athlete] and has a place for [the athlete] if they want to be there,” she said.Cross and her parents previously told Fox News Digital the alleged sexual harassment occurred in the girls’ locker room during the 2022-23 school year.Cross was in eighth grade, and the trans athlete was in seventh.“When Adaleia first told us, she told us that [the trans athlete] was telling her and other girls ‘suck my d–k,’” Cross’s mother, Abby Cross, alleged in December.
“[The trans athlete] was saying to her, coming up and saying to her, ‘I’m going to stick my d–k in your p–y and also in your ass.’ At different times [the trans athlete] was saying these things to her.” But Adaleia said Wednesday that the entire locker room changed after the athlete joined the girls’ team.“A lot of girls, after [the athlete] came into our locker room, started going to the bathroom,” Cross said.“They started changing in stalls, which was not really normal.”“You would have kids separated to try to not be...