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NEWS
RELEASE
Contact: Mat Staver
DATE: January
31, 2002 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Federal Court
Tells New York School District To Honor Parent's Religious
Belief And Orders School To Admit Student Who Refuses Vaccinations
Rochester, New
York - Federal Judge Michael Telesca ruled in favor of JoAnn
Curtis, on behalf of her daughter Bryanna Curtis, against the
Hilton Central School District and ordered that the 5-year-old
girl be allowed to attend kindergarten without being immunized.
The School District will not allow Bryanna to attend class, nor
go onto any school property at any time a school-related event
is taking place, until her parents violate their religious beliefs
and have Bryanna vaccinated. For example, if her brother is involved
in a school play in the evening, Bryanna would not be able to
attend. The parents and students are represented by Attorneys
Mathew D. Staver, President and General Counsel of Liberty Counsel
and Joel Oster, Litigation Counsel for Liberty Counsel.
New York state
law requires school-aged children to be subjected to a laundry
list of various vaccinations, including vaccinations that are
solely derived from aborted fetal cell lines. State law provides
exemptions to the vaccinations for medical reasons and to those
who object based on religious grounds. Bryanna's parents, who
are Roman Catholic, are opposed to immunizations for religious
reasons. They believe that their body is the temple of God and
that they should not defile their body with immunizations. In
addition, several immunizations are derived from aborted fetal
cell-lines, and they believe that injecting their bodies with
such immunizations promotes abortion and violates the Sixth Commandment, "Thou
Shall Not kill." The School District required Mrs. Curtis to
attend an "inquisition," where the District's attorney was present,
to respond to questions concerning her religious beliefs. During
the "inquisition," she had to respond to questions about her
devotional life, her theology, the groceries she buys, her medical
history, and even the type of toppings that she puts on her ice
cream. The School District then denied her religious exemption
and Bryanna was not allowed to attend class. In the letter denying
her the religious exemption, the School District stated, "[JoAnn's]
statement on August 15 that her children know how to eat because
they put fruit on ice cream as opposed to other sugar toppings,
[is] contrary to actions recalled by staff members of her oldest
son using sugar toppings on ice cream as opposed to fruit, at
his birthday party at school."
Judge Telesca
said Mrs. Curtis "demonstrated that her religious beliefs were
genuine." "This court may not pass on the wisdom of [Curtis']
belief, nor on the manner upon which she came to hold that belief,
provided that she maintains a sincere and genuine religious objection
to immunization," the judge said in his ruling. Mrs. Curtis said, "I
was just following my heart and God's command on my heart."
Staver said, "This
case represents a great victory for religious freedom." Attorney
Oster, who argued the case in federal court, said, "Subjecting
parents to detailed and intrusive investigations, such as what
Mrs. Curtis encountered, not only violates the United States
Constitution's guarantee of religious freedom, but also hearkens
back to the Inquisition. The School is obligated by the Constitution
to protect and defend the religious beliefs of parents. By denying
the parents a religious exemption because one of their sons used
sugar toppings on his ice cream, Defendants case mocked those
constitutional rights," concluded Oster.
Mathew D. Staver,
Esq.
Liberty Counsel
http://www.lc.org/ |
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