A Wyoming federal judge Monday ruled against a Rock Springs couple who sued their local school district on claims the district helped to socially gender-transition their high school daughter without their knowledge or consent.
Sean and Ashley Willeyâs lawsuit, aided with the past few months of evidence exchanged with Sweetwater County School District No. 1, doesnât carry enough proof that the school district violated their parental or religious rights, U.S. District Court Judge Scott Skavdahl ruled.
He judged the case early in the school districtâs favor and dismissed it.
The couple has promised to appeal.
"We are disappointed with the court's decision to grant summary judgment and wholeheartedly disagree with the court's analysis of uncontroverted evidence of the Defendants' actions as applied to legal precedent," wrote the Willeys' attorney Ernie Trakas in a statement sent Tuesday to Cowboy State Daily. "We believe the court got it wrong and its decision regrettably ignores acknowledged acts by the Defendants that clearly violated the Willey family's constitutionally protected parental right to make decisions concerning the health and wellbeing of their children, and to freely exercise their religious beliefs. We will be appealing this erroneous decision."
Sean and Ashley Willeyâs daughter attended Black Butte High School in Rock Springs, Wyoming, from 2021-2023. During that time, peers and multiple teachers started referring to her by a male name and pronouns.
Her mother Ashley Willey, who is a teacher in another school in the district, did not learn of her daughterâs new identity until a district-wide training March 29, 2022.
Another teacher referred to her daughter by a male name, prompting intense inquiry from Ashley Willey and a chain reaction of events culminating in a federal lawsuit against the school.
Ashley Willey messaged the district staff and personnel telling them to call her daughter by her given names and female pronouns.
The following fall semester, Aug. 15, 2022, the district adopted a policy whereby staffers had to sign an agreement to honor studentsâ requests to go by alternate names or pronouns, and it said, âstaff must respect the privacy of all students regarding such choice.â
Also during that school year a teacher, Ben Audevart, sent the Willeysâ daughter links to LGBTQ+ youth advocacy sites, and told the student how she could hide her access of one of those sites from others, court documents and evidence show.
The following fall and after the Willeys launched their lawsuit, the district softened its policy, this time only allowing confidentiality about pronouns if the studentâs health or safety is at risk â and offering accommodations to staffers who couldnât comply fully.
The school district leadership on Tuesday celebrated the court's ruling.
"We very much appreciate the courtâs recognition of the facts in this case,â said Sweetwater Schools Superintendent Dr. Joseph A. Libby in a statement sent to Cowboy State DAily. âOne of the most important facts is that we have a deep and abiding respect for parental rights even as we also uphold our commitment to promote an educational environment that is supportive and respectful to all our students. And itâs worth noting U.S. District Judgeâs Scott W. Skavdahlâs assertion: âA respectful and nondiscriminatory school environment is a legitimate state interest.â We could not agree more.â
Superintendent Libby said the case is an important reinforcement of both parental rights and a school districtâs obligation to respect them. âAt the same time, weâre glad to put this behind us,â Libby said, âand continue to focus on our vision of working with our community every day to prepare all our students for success in life.â
One After Another
One after another, Skavdahl ruled the Willeysâ claims unfit for trial given the evidence carrying them.
Sean Willey doesnât have standing because heâs the girlâs stepfather, not her father.
Ashley Willey had argued that the district violated her constitutional right to the care, custody and control of her children.
Itâs a fundamental right the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized.
But it doesnât create a burden for schools to announce to parents a âlaundry listâ of things that might affect a childâs upbringing, wrote Skavdahl.
The school honored the studentâs request to be called by male name and pronouns, but it didnât actively hide that from the parents, and didnât lie when confronted, the judge continued.
âAccording to (the Willeysâ logic), if a parent is not already aware of their childâs use of preferred name or pronouns, then in order to make those decisions, the school would have an obligation to proactively inform the parent,â the judge added.
If the judge were to place on the school district a duty to inform parents of every possible change in their childrenâs mental health to uphold the right to raise oneâs children, it âwould require constant, detailed information sharing from the school, with constitutional consequences.â
Ashley Willey had argued that during one of her detailed meetings with the school about her daughter, school staffers should have told her of her daughterâs name and pronouns.
Skavdahl disagreed, saying that too would layer obligations on the school and open up new and cumbersome, âaffirmativeâ duties.
Teacher Gone Rogue
The Willeys had pointed to Audevartâs emails to their child as proof that the schoolâs âprivacyâ policy about pronouns was being mobilized to violate their rights.
But those emails violated the schoolâs policies in other ways and therefore were outside its directives and approval, the judge noted, agreeing with the schoolâs own argument about those emails.
âThe District is not liable for the actions taken by an individual teacher without the authority of the District,â wrote Skavdahl.
Freedom Of Religion
Ashley Willey had alleged that the school violated her freedom of religion, both as a parent and as a teacher, with its pronoun policy.
As a parent, she waged the right to train her children regarding âhuman sexual identity and the unchangeable natural created order of humans as male and female,â says the judgeâs order.
Skavdahl declined to question her religious beliefs, but said Ashley Willey failed to show how those were burdened by the school districtâs actions, which again, he cast as passively and simply honoring the studentâs wish to be called by âpreferredâ name and pronouns.
âA personâs constitutional right to freely exercise their own religious beliefs does not require that the state also exercise those same religious beliefs,â wrote Skavdahl.
Quoting from an earlier case, he added, âThe Free Exercise Clause is âwritten in terms of what the government can do to the individual, not in terms of what the individual can extract from the government.ââ
To make the district act in accordance with Ashley Willeyâs religious beliefs âwould turn the First Amendment on its head,â he added.
And As A Teacher
Ashley Willey pointed to her religious duty to tell the truth, in conflict with the schoolâs former policy about respecting studentsâ âprivacyâ regarding their preferred names.
Ashley Willeyâs religious beliefs were potentially burdened by the former policy. But the policy survives that challenge because it is a âneutral law of general applicability,â wrote Skavdahl. In other words, the policy may impact oneâs religious beliefs but it doesnât target them.
The later policy offered reasonable accommodations, the judge noted. That doesnât signal that it fails the neutrality test, he added.
And both the old and new policies are tied to âpromoting a respectful and nondiscriminatory environment,â and they survive constitutional challenges, Skavdahl concluded.
Skavdahl ordered the case dismissed.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





