BREAKING: Judge in Army Lawsuit Protects Soldiers With Religious Exemptions to COVID Shots, Grants Preliminary Injunction

Updated

By Jefferey Jaxen

The United States Army is facing a class action lawsuit being heard in the Northern District of Texas to provide relief to service members who have refused the Covid vaccine citing their sincerely held religious beliefs.

Judge James Wesley Hendrix has just granted a preliminary injunction to the plaintiffs in the case barring the Army from taking any action against them for refusing the Covid jab. 

The plaintiffs have met their burden of showing that the defendants have substantially burdened their sincere religious beliefs” wrote the court in its new memorandum order.

In total up to this December, the active Army, Army reserve, and the Army National Guard has received a total of 9,068 religious exemptions to which only 123 were approved.

Just days before the preliminary injunction was issued, the court directed the Army to provide the name of any service member refusing a Covid vaccine for religious reasons at least a week before discharging them. The move will provide another layer of insulation from the mandate by allowing attorneys in the case to pursue individual injunctions for each service member while the motion for class certification is pending.

Each plaintiff in the case has requested an exemption to the Army’s vaccine mandate due to religious opposition to the use of fetal cell lines in developing the Covid-19 vaccine. Court documents also state that all of the plaintiffs have contracted and recovered from Covid-19.

Attorney Aaron Siri, managing partner at Siri & Glimstad, who is leading the Army class action case with support from The Informed Consent Action Network, recently appeared on FOX News to discuss the latest developments.

Meanwhile, the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) has passed both the House and the Senate with final language to rescind the military’s vaccine requirement included within it. 

While it will prevent new members of the military from being subject to a Covid-19 vaccine mandate, it will not require the military from desisting from disciplinary, punitive or separation measures for those that did not comply with the Covid-19 mandate before it was rescinded. Hence the need for the courts to intervene to protect these service members.

The bill now heads to Biden’s desk for his signature which, if signed, would end the 2021 military Covid vaccine directive by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin it.

However, a longer and deeper legal battle has been raging in American courtrooms for some time now. Cases defending the sincerely held religious beliefs of service members from the Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force against a COVID vaccine mandate have gained momentum.

In July 2022, a decision by Southern District of Ohio Judge Matthew McFarland to certify a case [Doster v. Kendall] as a class-wide complaint protected at least 10,000 airmen and guardians who are part of ongoing lawsuits contesting the Pentagon’s vaccine mandate.

The group includes anyone in the active duty Air Force and Space Force, Air Force Reserve, Air National Guard, U.S. Air Force Academy and Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps who have asked for a religious exemption to the vaccine since Sept. 1, 2021, showed a sincere religious belief opposing the jab, and whose requests were denied or are not yet settled.

The current Army case appears to be headed for a similar remedy in the coming weeks.

Less than a month ago, all three judges on a U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals panel unanimously upheld the class-wide injunction dealing what was reported as a near final blow to the Air Force’s COVID vaccine mandate.

Running parallel to the judicial and legislative movement against mandates, federal contractors are also seeing relief from the U.S. government’s Covid vaccine orders. 

Reuters has just reported on Monday that a U.S. appeals court “…said the White House could not require federal contractors to ensure that their workers are vaccinated against Covid-19 as a condition of government contracts. The U.S. government has contracts with thousands of companies, and courts have said the issue could affect up to 20% of U.S. workers.” 

As it appears that the final few edicts from the short era of Covid mandates may be coming to an end, the American people are left to ask why the U.S. government is so vehemently defending such orders in the face of crumbling support from the scientific community as well as their own regulatory agencies. 

Jefferey Jaxen

Jefferey Jaxen is a health journalist and featured in his weekly segment, ’The Jaxen Report’, on The HighWire. As an investigative journalist, researcher, and compelling writer, Jefferey serves as Lead editor of The HighWire News and Opinion Team.

Other Headlines

Coronavirus

Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo Referred to DOJ for Alleged Lies to Congress on COVID Nursing Home Policy

The Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic has referred former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to the DOJ (Department of Justice) for criminal prosecution. The committee’s X page said, “Evidence suggests Andrew Cuomo knowingly and willfully made materially false statements about New York’s COVID-19 nursing home disaster and the ensuing cover-up.” The letter signed byContinue reading Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo Referred to DOJ for Alleged Lies to Congress on COVID Nursing Home Policy

More news about Coronavirus

Health & Nutrition

Trump Names RFK Jr. HHS Secretary In New Administration

President Donald J. Trump selected Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), which includes oversight of the FDA, CDC, and NIH among other important federal health agencies. There have been mixed reactions following the announcement, which follows Trump and Kennedy’s campaign promise to make America healthy again. PresidentContinue reading Trump Names RFK Jr. HHS Secretary In New Administration

More news about Health & Nutrition

Vaccines

COVID-19 Vaccine Marketing Campaign Not Supported By Scientific Evidence, House Report Reveals

A 113-page House report was released last week regarding the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce’s Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations evaluated the “effectiveness and scientific accuracy of the “We Can Do This” COVID-19 vaccine promotional campaign that ran from AugustContinue reading COVID-19 Vaccine Marketing Campaign Not Supported By Scientific Evidence, House Report Reveals

More news about Vaccines

Science & Tech

Nearly Three-Quarters of Immunologist Peer Reviewers Receive Payments From Industry

Most peer reviewers receive research funds and other payments from the industry, according to new research published in The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). The peer review process has long been considered necessary to ensure the study is trustworthy and replicable. The latest publication provides data on financial incentives for peer reviewers in theContinue reading Nearly Three-Quarters of Immunologist Peer Reviewers Receive Payments From Industry

More news about Science & Tech

Environment

USDA Approves Deregulation of GMOs with Up to 12 Genetic Modifications

The USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has now deregulated certain GMO crops, allowing plants with up to 12 genetic modifications to bypass regulatory oversight if these modifications could theoretically be achieved through conventional breeding methods. APHIS published the final notice on Wednesday, noting that it received 6,500 comments regarding the proposal. TheContinue reading USDA Approves Deregulation of GMOs with Up to 12 Genetic Modifications

More news about Environment

Policy

Department of Government Efficiency Looks to Cut Wasteful Federal Spending With “Historic Opportunity”

President-elect Donald Trump announced the creation of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) which Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy will lead. The goal of this department is to reduce wasteful government spending and simplify the language of regulations. Musk has promised transparency and weekly updates regarding any proposed cuts to government spending. Senator Rand Paul,Continue reading Department of Government Efficiency Looks to Cut Wasteful Federal Spending With “Historic Opportunity”

More news about Policy