

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Six transgender Idaho residents have filed a lawsuit challenging Idaho’s new bathroom law, which makes it a crime to enter a bathroom designated for the opposite sex, arguing the measure is unconstitutional, discriminatory and too vague to enforce.The complaint, filed in federal court Thursday, alleges House Bill 752 would expose transgender residents to "violence, harassment, and psychological harm" and could subject them to criminal penalties for using public restrooms that "align with their gender identity.""I've been enjoying life as a man and using the men's restrooms hasn't been a big deal," Diego Fable, one of the plaintiffs, said in a press release. "But this law would force me to use the women's facilities, and doing so would only invite suspicion, questions, and raised eyebrows... The only safe option truly available is to just stay home — or leave the state entirely, leaving my treasured friends and community behind."HB 752 passed the Legislature in March and was signed by Gov. Brad Little on April 1. It is set to take effect July 1. The law would make it a misdemeanor offense to "knowingly and willfully" enter a restroom or changing room designated for
Lean: n/a · Source quality n/a · Factual vs opinion n/a.
© 2026 Vistoa. All rights reserved.
Limited excerpts, attribution, analysis, and outbound publisher links remain core product boundaries.