Liberty Counsel
NEWS RELEASE
Contact:
PUBLIC RELATIONS DEPARTMENT - 800-671-1776
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
January
21, 2004
Lawsuit
Forces School To Readmit Student Who Was Expelled
For Refusing The Hepatitis B Vaccination
Camden,
NJ – Nancy Mergenthal filed suit on behalf of her son against the
Gloucester Township School District after he was expelled by school officials
in December of 2003 for refusing to receive the Hepatitis B vaccine. Mrs.
Mergenthal is represented by Mathew D. Staver, President and General Counsel
of Liberty Counsel, and Joel Oster, Litigation Counsel for Liberty Counsel.
Mrs.
Mergenthal is a Christian who worships at the Bethel Christian Center. She
has a sincerely held belief that her body is the temple of God that she
should not intentionally defile, and she has come to believe that she should
not subject her children to immunizations, particularly Hepatitis B. Her
oldest son, Gene, at one time had a severe reaction to an immunization and
almost died. New Jersey law provides that a child shall be exempted from
mandatory immunization if the parent objects in writing, explaining how
the administration of the immunization conflicts with a bona fide religious
tenet or practice.
After
school officials informed Mrs. Mergenthal that her son must be immunized,
she submitted a written request for exemption, explaining in detail her
religious beliefs and why immunizations conflicted with these beliefs. Mrs.
Mergenthal’s pastor and her physician also submitted letters supporting
her objection to immunizations. The pastor, Rev. Kurt Kinney, stated in
part: “I am writing as her pastor to plead with you to listen with
an open heart to her request and grant that which she asks so that Matthew
can return to the school he enjoys and see the fairness of this great state.”
Despite her request, the state of New Jersey denied the exemption and the
school expelled Matthew and then threatened to pursue truancy charges against
Mrs. Mergenthal.
After
Mrs. Mergenthal filed suit on January 4, 2004, school officials agreed to
allow Matthew to return to school, but the case is still pending. Staver
said, “Many people have sincerely held religious beliefs that do not
permit them to subject their bodies to immunizations in general, or to some
immunizations in particular. That’s why virtually every state in the
country has an exemption from mandatory immunizations for medical or religious
reasons. Although New Jersey has such an exemption provision, state and
school officials ran roughshod over Mrs. Mergenthal’s religious beliefs.
It’s a sad day when government officials will only respect constitutional
liberties after they are subjected to a lawsuit.” Hepatitis B is not
a highly contagious condition. It can only be transmitted in one of three
ways. These three risk factors include a mother who is chronically infected
at the time of birth, blood products primarily through sharing dirty needles,
or promiscuous sex. Forcing a Hepatitis B vaccine on children conflicts
with most religious beliefs and instruction of parents that their children
should avoid promiscuous sex and illegal drug use.
|