Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Arkansas High Court Upholds Parental Rights Terminations In Tony Alamo Compound Families
Yesterday, the Arkansas Supreme Court handed down decisions in five appeals by parents of children who were removed in 2008 from the Tony Alamo Christian Ministries compound in Fouke, Arkansas. In each case, parental rights were terminated because the continued control of the compound by Tony Alamo made it an unsafe environment for children. A trial court held that parents could be reunited with their children only if they moved off church property and found jobs outside the Alamo Ministries so they are not financially dependent on it. (See prior posting.) In yesterday's decisions, the Supreme Court upheld the terminations over claims that the state's actions violated parents' right to the free exercise of religion as well as various other provisions. The cases are Myers v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, Krantz v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, Parrish v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, Reid v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, and Seago v. Arkansas Department of Human Services. AP reports on the decisions.