Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Tony Alamo Ministries Sues Arkansas Human Services Department
In an Arkansas federal court lawsuit filed Thursday, Tony Alamo Ministries and two of its members sued the Arkansas Department of Human Services , claiming that it has engaged in a campaign of harassment and intimidation against the church. State children's services officials have removed 36 children from the church's compound in Arkansas, saying that the children are endangered by practices such as underage marriages and beatings for ignoring church rules. (See prior posting.) The Arkansas Democrat Gazette and AP this week reported on the lawsuit. The complaint alleges that parents of the children are being required to move off church property and find jobs outside of the ministry to regain custody of their children. Meanwhile in scattered foster homes, the children are being exposed to television shows that would have been banned by the church, and are being vaccinated in violation of their parents' religious objections. It is alleged that the state pans to "deprogram" the children. Other parents with children under 18 have fled the church and are living as fugitives. The church has stopped holding services, and lacks personnel to fill the backlog of orders for Pastor Tony Alamo's cassette tapes and pamphlets.