Transgender Resident Faced Discrimination, Assault In City Homeless Shelters: Lawsuit

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A transgender former shelter resident is suing New York, saying city shelters failed to place her in a shelter for women or transgender people, putting her at risk of assault on multiple occasions. Advocates say she is not alone.

A men’s homeless shelter in the Tremont neighborhood in The Bronx. The lawsuit alleges the plaintiff was placed there despite identifying herself as a transgender woman. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

Content warning: This story includes descriptions of sexual assault. If you need support, contact RAINN’s hotline.

Jane Doe moved from Florida to New York City in 2020 because of its reputation as a safe city for transgender people.

But when she lost her home in the summer of 2022 and entered a homeless shelter, the city repeatedly failed to place her in a shelter that conformed with her gender identity, a lawsuit from Housing Works, Brooklyn Legal Services and Wang Hecker LLP alleges. 

During a two and a half year stay across three city shelters, Doe says shelter staff ignored her requests to be placed in a room with women or in a bed specifically for transgender people. Shelter staff repeatedly placed Doe in rooms with men, her lawyers say, putting her at risk of violence and predation.

Doe was sexually assaulted multiple times by other shelter residents during that period, the lawsuit filed in late October says.

“In the face of a national backlash against trans folks, with the right using transgender folks as a whipping post to whip up a base of prejudice among its base, it was so essential to be in a city that held itself out as a haven,” said Doe’s lawyer Armen Merjian of Housing Works. “It is all the more disappointing and angering to know that in the face of that she has gone through such trans discrimination in our system.”

The ordeal deeply wounded and hurt Doe, who is a Black transgender woman. She received permission from a Supreme Court of New York Judge to proceed anonymously in her case to protect her identity and her safety. Her name is also withheld in this story.

The City Law Department declined to comment on the suit.

In a statement, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeless Services (DHS) said, “While we cannot comment on the specifics of ongoing litigation, we will conduct a thorough investigation to verify the facts, and should we identify any violation of agency policy or staff misconduct, we will hold any and all bad actors accountable.”

The suit alleges that employees of DHS and three city-contracted shelter operators failed “to place her in a safe, secure housing accommodation because she is a transgender woman,” in violation of city human rights laws that protect gender identity and disability.

Doe says in the suit that despite informing multiple staff across shelters about her identity, requesting multiple transfers, and complaining to high-level staff at the city’s Department of Social Services, she was continually misgendered and mistreated.

The suit says she was misinformed about her rights to a gender-consistent bed, placed in facilities that endangered her safety, and retaliated against her for being transgender, jeopardizing her ability to secure permanent housing.

“For everyone that comes forward to me that’s a homeless person suffering something, or a person who is trans and Black and poor and discriminated against, they’re always the tip of the iceberg,” said Merjian.

A ‘beacon’ for transgender people

New York City has, in some ways, been on the cutting edge of policymaking to protect transgender people. But realizing those promises hasn’t always come easy.

Transgender people in the United States experience disproportionate violence compared to cisgender people. In 2019, the American Medical Association recognized it as “an epidemic.”

They are also twice as likely to experience homelessness, according to the Trevor Project. While there is limited data on the prevalence of homelessness and violence on transgender people by race, what researchers do know suggests that Black transgender women like Doe are at the greatest risk of predation.

“To see her be able to articulate the dignity that was stripped from her, the safety and the ability to safely come into her identity and in a city that she expected safety from. It’s heartbreaking,” said Julian Castronovo, a supervising attorney at Brooklyn Legal Services who works in the LGBTQ+ and HIV advocacy unit and also represents Doe.

In 2006, New York City’s DHS put out a first of its kind policy for serving LGBTQ+ New Yorkers, asking providers to assign people to the intake shelters that match their gender identity.

Then, in 2021, the city reached a settlement in Lopez v. NYC Department of Homeless Services, a landmark case that argued the city failed to protect the safety of transgender people in shelters.

The settlement required the city to establish shelter beds to specifically serve trans, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming (TGNC) people. DHS had designated a minimum of 40 units for gender nonconforming clients in five shelters as of earlier this year.

In part due to the Lopez settlement, New York then opened the nation’s first publicly funded homeless shelter for trans people at Ace’s Place earlier this year, with 150 beds specifically set aside for transgender and gender non-conforming clients, bringing the total to 190. In a press release championing the announcement, the department wrote: “the city stands as a beacon of safety, dignity, and empowerment for TGNC community members navigating housing insecurity.”

In a statement to City Limits, a DHS spokesperson added: “We recognize that a safe and affirming environment is absolutely critical to the health and stability of vulnerable New Yorkers looking to get back on their feet in shelter, which is why the agency has taken important steps to strengthen systemwide protections for LGBTQI+ individuals while ensuring trauma-informed service delivery across our network of not-for-profit providers that operate shelters.”

DHS doesn’t report an exact number of transgender people it serves in its shelters, but reports  indicate they served 362 LGBTQ people in its shelters from April through June of this year, with 123 specialty beds available for LGBTQ people.

In addition, the agency says it has implemented comprehensive training for DHS and provider staff on serving transgender and gender non-conforming clients. That includes annual reminders and updates to their policies and systems—like changing forms, data systems, and records to match a client’s preferred name and gender identity.

During that period where the city was rolling out new policies and planning trans-specific shelters, Doe says workers at DHS intake centers and individual shelters routinely discriminated against her, in direct violation of those policies and civil rights and disability rights law. Higher ups who knew about it did not hold those workers accountable, the suit alleges.

“There are policies on the books that say that what happened to Ms. Doe shouldn’t happen,” said Castronovo.

DHS’s policy on placing transgender-identifying individuals entitles them to a placement consistent with their gender identity, expedited placement upon request, a waitlist for TGNC beds, rights to transfer for safety, and other reasonable accommodations, like beds in single occupancy rooms, smaller rooms, or rooms with locking bathroom doors, as available.

But ensuring those policies make it into practice is another matter, advocates say.  

“New York has made important progress, but leadership on paper doesn’t always translate to lived safety for Trans people,” said Sean Ebony Coleman, the founder of Destination Tomorrow, which operates Ace’s Place, in a written statement to City Limits. “The experiences described by many Trans individuals living in New York City reflect what our community has been saying for years: discrimination, misgendering and unsafe conditions remain far too common.”

‘Not trans enough’

When Doe lost her apartment in summer 2022, she did what many New Yorkers do when they need help: she called 311. Relatively new to New York, recently out as trans, and now losing her home, Doe was particularly vulnerable.

“It was scary, because I don’t have any family here, so I had to enter the shelter system,” she said in a written response to questions from City Limits.

DHS intake facilities for single adults are gender-segregated. Men go to a shelter on 30th street in Manhattan. Women go to one of two intake facilities in the Bronx and Brooklyn.

When Doe told the 311 dispatcher that she was a transgender woman, Doe says she was told to go to the men’s intake shelter. Doe says the dispatcher told her that in order to be able to go to a women’s intake shelter, she had to be on Hormone Replacement Therapy for at least one year.

Hormone Replacement Therapy, or HRT, is a treatment that some transgender people undergo to replace or suppress the hormones that their body makes. One need not be on HRT to be transgender. Some cannot get HRT because of its high cost and systemic barriers to its use in many states.

As instructed, Doe went to the men’s intake shelter. There, she said that she repeated that she identifies as a transgender woman during her intake interview and requested a placement in a bed specifically for transgender people or in a women’s shelter. The intake interviewer said that she needed to be on HRT for at least one year.

“She was told that she’s not trans enough. She needs to be more trans by going on hormones, and then she was placed in a men’s shelter,” said Castronovo.

DHS said that it makes appropriate placements based on the client’s gender identity and also considers special accommodations clients need in making placements. The agency declined to comment on the specific circumstances of Doe’s placement, citing the pending litigation.

“There is to our understanding, no such requirement,” said Merjian of the idea that people must be on HRT in order to secure certain shelter placements. “We can only imagine that our client could not have been the only person at several different locations in the homeless system to be so informed.”

DHS confirmed that being on HRT is not and has never been a requirement. The agency said it relies solely on self-reported gender identity to make placements.

Doe was not able to begin HRT until 2023 because she lacked access to a provider, the lawsuit states. It argues the denial of Doe’s gender identity during placement exposed her to risk of assault and constitutes differential treatment, a violation of DHS’ transgender policy and discrimination under the law.

Violence against transgender people is two and a half times higher than against cisgender people in the United States, according to Everytown for Gun Safety.

“That act of coming out to the public is incredibly emotionally vulnerable, but it also incites violence,” said Castronovo.

Sexual assault in shelters

Doe’s lawsuit describes multiple horrific assaults, callous shelter staff, and insufficient response from higher-ups at DHS across two-plus years in shelter.

“You don’t know what’s going to happen to you on a day-to-day basis,” Doe told City Limits in written responses through her attorneys.

After intake in August 2022, Doe was placed at the NAICA East Tremont Shelter, a congregate men’s shelter in the Bronx. She slept in a room with approximately 15 men.

She made multiple requests to staff for a transfer to a women’s shelter or a specialized bed for transgender people, according to the lawsuit.

“In each instance, Ms. Doe’s DHS Case manager informed her that there were no available TGNC Beds and ignored Ms. Doe’s request to be moved to a women’s shelter,” the complaint reads.

To shower at East Tremont, residents have to use one large room with several showerheads. According to Doe, one day while she was showering alone, a man approached her from behind and grabbed her. Another night, Doe awoke to another resident standing next to her bed, masturbating, the lawsuit alleges. In both cases, she reported the incidents to shelter staff and requested a transfer.

When she did eventually transfer to the Second Avenue Men’s Shelter in Brooklyn in December 2022, she was placed in a congregate setting with approximately 15 male roommates. Again, she asserted her transgender identity to shelter staff and asked for a transfer. Again, she was told that she needed to be on HRT for a year, the suit alleges.

“The response from the shelter workers was often to minimize, putting the responsibility back on Ms. Doe for escalation and kind of look the other way,” said Castronovo.

While at The Second Avenue Men’s Shelter, and later at a Long Island City shelter called Pam’s Place, Doe and an advocate she was working with at a homeless services nonprofit sent emails to the director of LGBTQI affairs at DHS and submitted official complaints to DHS’ ombudsman’s office, fearing for her safety. That exhausted the list of escalations available to Doe, according to DHS’ “know your rights” brochure.

In that correspondence Doe’s advocate described repeated assaults, requested transfers, complained about Doe being roomed with cisgender men, and said shelter staff were unresponsive to her pleas.

DHS did not comment on the discrimination and assaults alleged by the lawsuit. The agency also declined to comment on the complaints and escalations surrounding Doe’s case, saying it is working to verify the facts as part of the litigation. The agency has various channels for clients to safely report and escalate concerns, a spokesperson said.

On both occasions, Doe and her advocate’s outreach was not met with appropriate action by DHS, the suit alleges. 

DHS policy entitles shelter residents to request transfers when they are under threat of harm, such as gender-based harassment. Clients with disabilities—like Doe, who is diagnosed with gender dysphoria—are also entitled to additional reasonable accommodations when a facility cannot meet their needs. For transgender clients, that could include being in rooms with people of their own gender identity, single or smaller rooms, or using bathrooms and showers that lock.

Shelter staff, the lawsuit alleges, repeatedly denied Doe those considerations and failed to mediate with her, in violation of laws to protect people with disabilities navigating public systems.

In addition, staff are required to report serious incidents like sexual assaults. Those incidents require follow up by shelter supervisors. Staff are trained on incident reporting once a year, according to DHS policy.

Doe’s advocate did successfully reach DHS’ director of LGBTQI affairs, Brent Woodfield, who put in a transfer request, according to the suit. But it was almost a year later, in September 2023, before Doe left the Second Avenue Men’s Shelter.

This time she was given a “TGNC” placement at Pam’s Place, a women’s shelter in Queens. But her troubles continued, her lawyers said.

“When they finally placed her in a shelter for transgender women, they nonetheless, once again—in small rooms—placed cisgender men in the room, astonishingly,” said Merjian. “Leading, not surprisingly, to yet more assault.”

At Pam’s Place, despite being in a bed set aside for transgender individuals, Doe alleges that she was sexually assaulted by roommates, whom she identified as cisgender men. The lawsuit alleges several assaults by Doe’s roommates: that while she stayed there they inserted their penis into the sleeping Doe’s mouth, masturbated in the room while looking at her, and grabbed her head and pushed it towards their genitals.

DHS said that Pam’s Place is a women’s shelter in a converted hotel with nine beds set aside for TGNC people. They said that the agency relies on self-reported identity when making placements and does not place self-identified cisgender men in TGNC beds.

Neighborhood Association for Inter-Cultural Affairs, Samaritan Dayton Village, and Acacia Network Housing, the operators of the three shelters Doe stayed in, declined to comment, referring requests to DHS.

The plaintiff was eventually given a “TGNC” placement at a women’s shelter in Queens, according to the lawsuit. But her troubles continued, her lawyers said. (Adi Talwar)

Getting out

New York City’s shelter system can be challenging to navigate. 

“You have to be in by a certain time, and out of the shelter by a certain time, and you can’t return to the shelter until later. If you work overnights, it’s very difficult. You have to get permission, to secure passes to return and sleep, and it’s a difficult process,” Doe said.

Transgender people in shelter face increased barriers, and sometimes retaliation when they try to assert their rights, advocates for transgender people in shelter told City Limits. Their clients are often so desperate to get out of shelter that they tolerate daily insults and discrimination from shelter staff and fellow residents, th e advocates said.

“It is rare if our clients are not misgendered by staff and other participants. I mean, that is just par for the course,”said Castronovo.

DHS’ transgender policy specifically prohibits using discriminatory language and misgendering transgender clients. DHS says that it trains all shelter staff on the policies, but declined to comment on the specific accusations in the case.

Castronovo says that violence against transgender people in shelter is so normalized that his clients don’t try to fight it—they just put their head down and try to find housing.

“We ask, ‘Have you experienced violence by other shelter residents?’’ They say, ‘Yeah, of course, that’s why I’m trying to get out,’” Castronovo added.

The best chance to get out is with a housing voucher—and the most common voucher is the City Fighting Homelessness and Eviction Prevention Supplement (CityFHEPS), which serves a record 60,000-plus households, according to DSS.

Doe’s torturous stay in the shelter system was extended by the frustrating process of trying to secure housing with a CityFHEPS voucher, she and her attorneys say.

City Limits has previously reported on the difficulty of finding an apartment with a voucher, due to a tight housing market, discrimination against voucher holders, and delays in processing voucher applications.

“I found multiple apartments, and shelter staff needed to complete paperwork, but they repeatedly made simple mistakes, or took too long, or did not respond for weeks, and as a result I lost apartments,” said Doe.

Application processing times, the city’s Human Resources Administration says, have improved in recent months. At a hearing before City Council’s Oversight committee last week, officials said the application processing time is now down to 23 days, from a high of 33 days in 2024.

Currently, 11,000 people in DHS shelters have voucher shopping letters that allow them to search for housing, according to officials. 100,000 people in total were living in DHS shelters in September 2025, according to City Limits’ shelter tracker. Transgender voucher holders face additional discrimination because of run-of-the-mill transphobia from landlords.

Working, searching for housing, and rooming with strangers all at once took its toll on Doe.

At that time in 2022, residents had to be in shelter for 90 days in order to receive the voucher shopping letter that enables them to start applying for apartments, a rule that complicated transfers for residents like Doe who need reasonable accommodations.

“There are many rules to follow—don’t lose your bed, keep all appointments with your counselor—and when I asked to be transferred to a women’s shelter or a TGNC shelter for my safety, I was repeatedly told that this would restart the 90-day waiting period to receive the voucher,” Doe said.

Mayor Eric Adams removed the 90 day waiting period for CityFHEPS vouchers in mid-2023.

Navigating shelter as a transgender person, advocates say, takes remarkable persistence and a consistent declaring of one’s rights. Being more vulnerable to assault, they are more likely to require accommodations, transfers, and assistance—and more time from case managers who are already stretched thin.

“What we often see is that when folks advocate for themselves in these shelters, staff get annoyed at [transgender residents] because they’re too much work, they’re a burden,” said Castronovo.

Providers at the shelters Doe lived did not respond to the specific accusations.

‘Tip of the iceberg’

DHS says that it is leading the way in the country on transgender policies in shelter and that it is committed to addressing any violation of agency policy across the system.

But Doe’s lawyers allege that the discrimination against her was not an isolated incident. “It rings hollow here, given the number of people and the number of shelters and the number of times my client was told illegal things,” said Merjian.

Merjian said that recounting traumatic experiences over and over again—which pursuing a legal remedy requires—can be triggering.

“[Doe] cares very deeply about her community. She has talked constantly to other people in the system, and has let us know in no uncertain terms, that this is a systemic problem, that there are many others that have had terrifying and horribly frustrating experiences as trans individuals in the New York City homeless system,” he said. 

Advocates told City Limits that some of that just means making sure DHS lives up to its policies. 

“There is absolutely more work to do. The city must invest in mandatory, ongoing, Trans-specific training led by Trans experts; enforce clear accountability measures for discriminatory behavior; expand access to Trans-affirming, community-based housing models and ensure that policies protecting Trans people are actually implemented at the staff level,” Destination Tomorrow’s Coleman said in a statement.

With a limited but growing supply of beds for transgender-identifying people, “that means in many, many cases, single rooms, private showers,” said Castronovo.

Ace’s Place, the city’s dedicated TGNC shelter, has single-stalled toilets and showers and bathrooms. And in general, DHS has made efforts to move towards individual rather than congregate settings as it builds out a network of “safe haven” shelters that include individual rooms.

DHS says it’s committed to building on the work it’s already done to increase protections and resources for transgender New Yorkers.

“The Department of Homeless Services opened the nation’s first publicly funded shelter for transgender individuals at a time when their rights are roundly under attack—reflecting our firm commitment to protecting and supporting marginalized communities,” a spokesperson for the agency said in a statement.

Doe moved into an apartment on Feb. 6, 2025 with her CityFHEPS voucher after two and a half years in the shelter system.

“She’s come forward, above all else, to sound the alarm and in the hopes that we can rectify this and correct all that is wrong with the current system,” said Merjian.

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Patrick@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org.

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

The post Transgender Resident Faced Discrimination, Assault In City Homeless Shelters: Lawsuit appeared first on City Limits.

Family member questioned after Rob Reiner and his wife found dead in Los Angeles, AP source says

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By CHRISTOPHER WEBER and MIKE BALSAMO

LOS ANGELES — Investigators were questioning a family member of director-actor Rob Reiner Rob Reiner and his wife Michele after they were found dead at their home in Los Angeles, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation.

Investigators believe they suffered stab wounds, said the official, who could not publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Los Angeles Police had not identified a suspect, Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton, the chief of detectives, said at a briefing on Sunday night.

“We are going to try to speak to every family member that we can to get to the facts of this investigation,” Hamilton said.

The Los Angeles Fire Department said it responded to a medical aid request shortly after 3:30 p.m. and found a 78-year-old man and 68-year-old woman dead inside. Reiner turned 78 in March.

Detectives with the Robbery Homicide Division were investigating an “apparent homicide” at Reiner’s home, said Capt. Mike Bland with the Los Angeles Police Department.

Los Angeles authorities have not confirmed the identities of the people found dead at the residence in the upscale Brentwood neighborhood on the city’s west side that’s home to many celebrities.

Reiner was long one of the most prolific directors in Hollywood, and his work included some of the most memorable movies of the 1980s and ’90s, including “This is Spinal Tap,” “A Few Good Men,” “When Harry Met Sally” and “The Princess Bride.”

His role as Meathead in Norman Lear’s 1970s TV classic “All in the Family,” as a liberal foil to O’Connor’s Archie Bunker, catapulted him to fame and won him two Emmy Awards.

Relatives of Lear, the legendary producer who died in 2023, said the deaths left them bereft.

“Norman often referred to Rob as a son, and their close relationship was extraordinary, to us and the world,” said a Lear family statement. “Norman would have wanted to remind us that Rob and Michele spent every breath trying to make this country a better place, and they pursued that through their art, their activism, their philanthropy, and their love for family and friends.”

Messages to Reiner’s representatives were not immediately returned Sunday night.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called it a devastating loss for the city.

“Rob Reiner’s contributions reverberate throughout American culture and society, and he has improved countless lives through his creative work and advocacy fighting for social and economic justice,” Bass said in a statement. “An acclaimed actor, director, producer, writer, and engaged political activist, he always used his gifts in service of others.”

The son of comedy legend Carl Reiner, Rob Reiner was married to photographer Michele Singer Reiner since 1989. The two met while he was directing “When Harry Met Sally” and have three children together.

Reiner was previously married to actor-director Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981. He adopted her daughter, Tracy Reiner. Carl Reiner died in 2020 at age 98 and Marshall died in 2018.

Killings are rare in the Brentwood neighborhood. The scene is about a mile from the home where O.J. Simpson’s wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman were killed in 1994.

__

Balsamo reported from Washington. Associated Press Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton in Los Angeles contributed.

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Classes resume after Stewartville school shooting

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Stewartville Superintendent Belinda Selfors says she and her staff are focused on supporting students and staff after a Friday morning shooting at the high school’s parking lot left one student in critical condition and the alleged adult shooter dead.

“Our focus is on the safety and well-being of our staff, our students and our families,” Selfors said during a news conference Friday morning.

“As soon as we learned about the situation this morning, we canceled all classes for students across the district to prioritize their safety and the safety of our staff and to give law enforcement full access to the scene,” she added.

The Olmsted County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the shooting. Details about what led up to the incident, as well as the names and ages of those involved, have not been released as of early Friday afternoon.

The sheriff’s office says the student was taken to Mayo Clinic Hospital-Saint Marys for immediate surgery. He remained in critical, but stable condition. The adult male was found with a rifle in his hand and an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Selfors said response plans were being finalized Friday morning and would be sent to families as soon as they are completed.

“Care and support will be available for students and staff over the weekend, and when school resumes on Monday,” she said.

Sheriff Kevin Torgerson, who lives in Stewartville, said his department is leaving the planning of resuming classes to the school district, but said there are benefits to bringing students together as soon as possible.

“From my experience, being around the schools for a number of years, it’s also good to have the kids together,” he said. “They can support each other, too.”

The shooting happened around 5 a.m. Friday, as the Stewartville wrestling team was preparing to head to a two-day meet in Grand Forks, North Dakota.

With roughly 40 teammates and school staff at the scene, Torgerson said many of the students on the bus were initially unaware of the shooting. He also noted that because it happened before school hours, there was not a need to lock down the school building.

Still, he said, community support quickly arrived at the scene as students were held until they could be reconnected with their families on Friday morning.

“We had our chaplaincy group, and I know there were some other pastoral folks that were here already,” he said. “School counselors were deployed immediately to the school to be with the team.

“I feel really comfortable and confident in saying the school district has done a phenomenal job in supporting the students and the coaches.”

With support expected to continue as plans for next week are being made, Selfors asked community members to pray for those touched by the tragedy.

“I ask that we show grace and kindness, avoid speculation and keep supporting one another,” she said.

Selfors and Torgerson urged the community to refrain from spreading rumors about the incident and wait for details to emerge as the investigation continues.

“I know that’s a big ask in the world of social media,” the sheriff said.

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Takeaways from the Vikings’ 34-26 win over the Cowboys

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ARLINGTON, Texas — It would’ve been easy for the Vikings to simply go through the motions on Sunday night at AT&T Stadium. They were eliminated from playoff contention before they ever stepped foot on the field for the game against the Dallas Cowboys.

Instead, the Vikings dug in and showed some pride on national television, bouncing back from some early adversity to earn a 34-26 win. It’s marked the first time the Vikings have won consecutive games this season.

That’s something head coach Kevin O’Connell wanted his group of players to feel proud about as they got on the plane back to the Twin Cities.

As frustrating as this season has been for the Vikings, the upset of the Cowboys provided something to feel good about in the short term, while also providing some ripple effects that might pay dividends in the long term.

Here are some takeaways from the game:

J.J. McCarthy was extremely resilient

The first throw of the game for quarterback J.J. McCarthy ended in complete disaster. The ball got deflected by safety Donovan Wilson at the line of scrimmage and intercepted by defensive tackle Quinnen Williams.

The fact that McCarthy was able to bounce back for the Vikings and have the best game of his career against the Cowboys can’t be overstated. Not everybody would’ve been able to move on as quickly as he did. He deserves credit for being able to do that.

The final stat line for McCarthy featured him completing 15 of 24 passes for 250 yards and a pair of touchdowns through the air while also adding a touchdown on the ground.

There was a decisiveness from McCarthy that resulted in some chunk plays, and while he still missed a few too many layups throughout the game, the improvement is an encouraging sign in his development.

Justin Jefferson dropped a touchdown

The struggles that superstar receiver Justin Jefferson has had to endure this season have been largely due to the inconsistencies of whoever has been throwing him the ball. There have been a lot of ups and down, whether it’s been McCarthy, veteran quarterback Carson Wentz, or rookie quarterback Max Brosmer under center.

It’s a big reason why Jefferson is in danger of finishing below 1,000 yards for the first time in his career. His performance for the Vikings against the Cowboys didn’t get him much closer to reaching that milestone as he finished with a pair of receptions for 22 yards.

Though the underwhelming numbers stat line stems from McCarthy misfiring on a number of throws, Jefferson also didn’t do himself any favors in the game. He had a chance to haul in a touchdown in the corner of the end zone and flat out dropped the ball.

That has been a recurring theme for Jefferson this season. As much as he can blame McCarthy, Wentz, or Brosmer for his lack of production, he also has to blame himself for not always maximizing his opportunities.

Jalen Nailor is going to get paid

The campaign that receiver Jalen Nailor has put together shouldn’t be taken lightly. He’s put himself in position to make a lot of money in free agency, which, in turn, means the Vikings more than likely won’t be able to afford to bring him back.

The way that Nailor impacted the game for the Vikings against the Cowboys — he hauled in a pair of touchdowns that proved to be the difference — showcased how much he’s grown as a player since reaching the NFL.

No longer is Nailor simply a speed demon that makes his living running deep down the field. He’s turned himself into a complete receiver that can make a difference at every level of the defense.

Ryan Wright provided a needed spark

There’s a chance the Vikings might have found themselves in a much different spot against the Cowboys had punter Ryan Wright not flipped the field in the early stages.

With the Vikings already trailing in the game, they were forced to punt in their own territory, which presumably was going to give the Cowboys pretty good field position with a chance to take a commanding lead.

Instead, Wright continued his case as the most improved player on the roster, unleashing a booming 65-yard punt that was downed inside the 5-yard line. That proved to be a massive play for the Vikings as the defense forced a punt and the offense put together a drive that tied the game.

It very easily could’ve gotten out of hand for the Vikings had Wright not helped stop the bleeding when he did.

Dak Prescott never looked comfortable

Maybe it sounds crazy to say Prescott looked out of sorts in a game where he completed 23 of 38 passes for 294 yards. He consistently found open receivers over the middle while moving the ball with ease at times.

That said, Prescott did not throw for a touchdown, largely because of the constant pressure that was in his face.

That discomfort he felt was a direct result of another masterclass from defensive coordinator Brian Flores. Not only did the exotic looks before the snap seem to rattle Prescott so did the various stunts after the snap.

It resulted in Prescott being pressured on 48% of his dropbacks. That was the highest pressure rate of his career.

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