Mother Taken To Court For Refusing To Vaccinate Disabled Son

A legal battle will return to the high court after two judges ruled a 23-year-old mentally disabled man should be given the COVID-19 vaccines in spite of his mother’s wishes and a specialist report warning the jab could cause him serious harm.

The case will set a legal precedent in the matter of who decides whether adult children who cannot consent should receive state-sanctioned treatment where the parents do not want them to, with the judge who made the initial order calling it “an ethical dilemma in an untested area.”

The unnamed mother has put out anonymous videos giving her son’s first name as “Tom” in a bid to raise funds to pay her legal costs.

The woman does not want her son to have the mRNA jabs, and a world-leading medical expert has stated that Tom could be at serious risk from the vaccines because of his chromosomal abnormality and his heart condition.

Despite this, two judges separately ruled that Tom should be jabbed and issued court orders in favour of the local authority, who initiated the action against the mother.

The local authority is not named in the court documents and Tom is referred to only as “TN” while his mother is referred to as “RN” with the family described as being from the north-west of England.

Rare Chromosomal Abnormality

Tom was born with a rare chromosomal abnormality known as Trisomy 13, which caused him to have severe learning difficulties and no speech. He was born with a cleft palate and congenital heart disease, which he had major surgery for.

“He was one when he had his heart surgery. I just kissed him on the forehead and said I will always protect you. And this is what I feel I’m doing at the moment,” Tom’s mother said in a video interview.

“It’s just like having a baby, he is a baby, he has a very young mental age. But he’s in a grown man’s body.”

Tom’s mother is a single parent and has always looked after her son full-time, receiving some help with his care from the local authority.

She said: “They (the local authority representatives) suddenly appeared after the lockdowns. They said, we’ve come to just have a check-up—but it was an unusual visit. And the doctor approached me again and said, ‘Can you tell me again, why is it you don’t want to have the vaccine?’

“It was just after I’d spoken to the doctor I got a big envelope through the post and (they were) taking me to court. I just couldn’t believe it.”

Tom’s mother sought the opinion of a specialist in Tom’s condition. She found paediatrics Professor Martin McCaffrey in the United States, who said that Tom would be at “significant risk” of having an adverse reaction to the jabs because of his body’s inability to process RNA in the same way as most people due to his chromosomal abnormality.

Mr. McCaffrey said that Tom was at further risk because of his heart disease and previous surgery—and that based on the principle of “first do no harm,” it would be unethical for him to be given the jabs.

The first hearing took place in a Manchester court in Sept. 2022 where judge Mr. Justice Burrows ruled that Tom should receive the recommended course of vaccinations despite the warnings of the specialist and his mother’s objections.

Mr. Justice Burrows said he could not know for sure how Tom would act if he had mental capacity, but although he would likely have been influenced by his mother, in his opinion, he might also have “been a responsible citizen” and taken the vaccine to protect others.”

“One further factor relevant to the best interests of RN is whether he may have made an altruistic decision—i.e. to receive the vaccine to protect the community at large, or in a narrower way, such as his family.

“This is a particularly important subject when considering the administration of a vaccine designed to prevent the spread, or at least the rapid spread of a virus. In other words: might RN have behaved like a responsible citizen and considered the effect of his decision on other people had he made the decision for himself?”

The Precautionary Principle

Representing Tom’s mother, barrister Francis Hoar argued that the precautionary principle should be applied when assessing the risks and possible benefits of the vaccines because the technology was new and the medium to long-term risks could not be known.

Tom’s mother gave evidence in person and submitted around 500 pages of articles and reports on possible vaccine side effects and natural immunity—but the judge said the role of the court was not to determine whether or not the vaccines are safe and effective but to apply the guidance of the government’s green book on immunisation.

Two doctors, including a GP and a cardiologist, gave evidence stating it was in Tom’s best interests to have the jabs as he is considered more “vulnerable” to the effects of COVID-19—despite the fact he had already had the virus without serious consequences, as proven by the presence of antibodies in his blood.

An order was made in favour of the NHS Integrated Care Board, but after reading the specialist’s report, Tom’s GP refused to give him the jabs, with the head pharmacist of the local vaccination centre also declining because of concerns over their insurance liability.

Mr. Justice Haydon upheld Mr. Justice Burrows’s decision at a high court appeal in Dec. 2022. Barrister Paul Diamond argued that Tom’s mother should have full and continuing parental rights because Tom lacks “Gillick’s competence” needed to consent to medical decisions.

Mr. Justice Haydon said that Tom should not be treated as if he were a child and therefore subject to parental rights—despite the fact he has a mental age of around 18 months, takes pleasure in being shown story books about animals and could never look after himself.

‘A Subversion of Adult Autonomy’

“An adult who lacks capacity is not and should never be treated as a child. That paternalistic approach has long ago been consigned to history and recognised for what it is, a subversion of adult autonomy,” the judgement ruled.

The judge paid tribute to the “sincerity” of Tom’s mother’s beliefs, and to the devoted care she has given to her son, but ruled that, “Children are not chattels of parents. Our domestic law emphasises responsibilities rather than rights.”

Several months after the high court decision, Tom’s mother again heard from the local authority’s solicitor, who told her they had found a doctor who was willing to administer the jabs.

She was given a list of dates to choose from for her son to receive the first injection but refused to make an appointment.

“They expect me to walk my son into a room knowing that something will be injected into him that potentially could harm him or kill him. To be honest, I just find it so cruel, what they’re doing,” she said.

“She (the local authority solicitor) informed me there’d be two people in the room, and that I could attend, but if I showed any sort of resistance then they would ask me to leave the room.”

“I don’t understand why she feels he has to have it, especially as he has already had COVID-19—more than once—he has natural immunity.”

Thanking her supporters for messages and donations, she said: “I have to stay strong. We’re a unit and I love him with all my heart. And I’m everything to him as well. He knows when I’m upset. He puts his arms around me and he kisses me all the time.”

The case will now go back to the high court and will again be heard by Mr. Justice Burrows.

The grounds for the latest appeal include that the two judges at the court of protection failed to uphold common law parental rights as well as Article 8 rights of a mother in relation to a non-Gillick competent adult child.

Source: Epoch Times

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Comments (8)

  • Avatar

    Tom

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    The courts are the ones mentally disabled.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    S.C.

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    This may be the most cold-hearted example of government overreach I have seen yet.
    There are clearly no benefits, just terrible risks to this young man.
    It’s attempted murder by court order, plain and simple.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    BRIAN SHIRREFF

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    The judge said “he might also have “been a responsible citizen” and taken the vaccine to protect others.” But it is common knowledge that the vaccines do not stop transmission, so they don’t protect others and there is a ton of evidence of injuries caused by these vaccines. Following the government’s green book is a cop-out. Everyone should be allowed to challenge the government. Scientific evidence relating to the efficacy and safety of the vaccines should not be excluded or ignored. All the evidence should be weighed up by the judge. This decision is an outrage

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Cloudbuster

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    “The judge paid tribute to the ‘sincerity’ of Tom’s mother’s beliefs, and to the devoted care she has given to her son, but ruled that, ‘Children are not chattels of parents. Our domestic law emphasises responsibilities rather than rights.'”

    The point of this exercise is to impress upon people that while children and the mentally disabled may not be “chattels of parents,” they are certainly “chattels of state.” How else can you interpret it?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    VOWG

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    The stupid line, protect others, shows a lack of intelligence.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Greg Spinolae

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    De-population always STARTS with those least able to defend themselves; invariably those that the Predator-Class deem to be DISPOSABLE.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Greg Spinolae

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    The whole “procedure” really does sound like an “execution” for the most egregious crime – the crime of non-compliance.
    viz…there will be 2 people in the room and you will be removed if you utter a sound while your child is executed.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    David

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    A ruling that is contrary to evidence and medical ethics. Another example of the increasing authoritarianism in Britain.

    Reply

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