Liberty Counsel
NEWS RELEASE
Contact: PUBLIC RELATIONS
DEPARTMENT - 800-671-1776
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
August 30, 2007
Appeals
Court Asked To Hold State
Responsible for Illegally Strip Searching Children
Milwaukee,
WI - Today Liberty Counsel filed a brief at the Seventh Circuit Court
of Appeals in a case involving a state worker who made two elementary
children undress without parental consent. The case is Michael
C. v. Gresbach. The eight-year-old boy, his nine-year-old sister
and their parents are represented by Stephen Crampton, Vice President
of Legal Affairs and General Counsel for Liberty Counsel, and Wisconsin
attorney Michael D. Dean.
The
case involves Dana Gresbach, a social worker from the Bureau of Milwaukee
Child Welfare, who, acting on a tip that Michael C. had spanked one
of the children with a plastic stick, decided to examine the children
at a Christian school. Gresbach entered Good Hope Christian Academy
and had the principal bring the children to a private room for questioning.
She instructed the principal not to call their parents and would not
allow the principal to observe the investigation. Gresbach then interrogated
both students, forcing the boy to raise his shirt and the girl to
lift her jumper and pull down her tights for a bodily examination.
After the parents found out about the incident, they were furious.
Gresbach closed her investigation after finding no evidence of abuse.
The
trial court ruled that there was an obvious violation of the students'
Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
Now, Gresbach has appealed that ruling to the Seventh Circuit Court
of Appeals.
The
case involves the fundamental issue of the constitutional right of
families to be free from unwarranted intrusions by government social
workers who, as here, without any parental knowledge or consent, subject
children to humiliating and degrading activities. The case also raises
concerns about the defiance of the Bureau of Milwaukee Child Welfare
to respect basic restraints on the exercise of its enormous power.
In another federal lawsuit against the same Bureau, Doe v. Heck,
the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that it is "patently
unconstitutional" for government officials to seize a child on
private school premises without a warrant or an emergency.
Stephen
Crampton, Vice President of Legal Affairs and General Counsel for
Liberty Counsel, commented: "Government social workers cannot
simply barge into a private school whenever they feel like it and
strip search innocent children. Just like police officers, they must
obtain a warrant, consent, or be acting in an emergency, before performing
physical searches or other intrusive investigations."
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