联邦法院重启针对洛杉矶 COVID-19 疫苗授权的诉讼
Federal Court Revives Lawsuit Against Los Angeles COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/federal-court-revives-lawsuit-against-los-angeles-covid-19-vaccine-mandate

第九巡回上诉法院推翻了下级法院驳回一项反对洛杉矶学区强制员工接种 COVID-19 疫苗的诉讼的裁决。 原告辩称,该授权侵犯了他们的正当程序和平等保护权,因为根据他们的说法,COVID-19 疫苗并不能阻止病毒传播。 尽管美国地方法院法官做出了有利于该地区的裁决,但上诉法院认定她误用了具有里程碑意义的 1905 年雅各布森诉马萨诸塞州裁决。 法官承认,根据原告的证据,疫苗在阻止 COVID-19 传播方面的功效仍不清楚。 因此,他们认为雅各布森先例不适用于这种情况,并将案件发回地区法院,以使用适当的标准进一步审查。 一位同意的法官强调了个人拒绝医疗权利的重要性,并引用了最高法院最近就此事作出的裁决。 与此同时,一名持不同意见的法官认为,学区打算不再执行该命令,这使得该案毫无意义,并质疑将 1905 年雅各布森诉马萨诸塞州原则延伸到其预期范围之外的理由。 市场对这些事态发展做出了反应,影响了医疗保健行业的股票表现。

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原文

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A federal appeals court has revived a lawsuit challenging the COVID-19 vaccine mandate imposed by the Los Angeles school district, noting that the record doesn’t clearly show whether the vaccines prevent transmission of the illness.

A COVID-19 vaccine is administered to a person in Los Angeles on Jan. 29, 2022. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)

The Health Freedom Defense Fund and other challengers to the mandate asserted that it violated the due process and equal protection rights of district employees, in part because the vaccines, unlike traditional vaccines, “are not effective” in preventing infection.

U.S. District Judge Dale Fischer disagreed, throwing out the case in 2022. She ruled that even if the COVID-19 vaccines don’t prevent infection, mandates can be imposed under a 1905 U.S. Supreme Court ruling because the vaccines reduce symptoms and prevent severe disease and death.

A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on June 7 reversed that ruling, finding that Judge Fischer extended the 1905 Jacobson v. Massachusetts ruling “beyond its public health rationale—government’s power to mandate prophylactic measures aimed at preventing the recipient from spreading disease to others—to also govern ‘forced medical treatment’ for the recipient’s benefit.”

U.S. Circuit Judge Ryan Nelson, writing for the 2–1 majority, added, “At this stage, we must accept plaintiffs’ allegations that the vaccine does not prevent the spread of COVID-19 as true. And, because of this, Jacobson does not apply.” That position was reached after lawyers for the defendants provided facts about the vaccines that “do not contradict plaintiffs’ allegations.”

Lawyers for the district had pointed out that a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention publication describes the COVID-19 vaccines as “safe and effective” although the publication doesn’t detail effectiveness against transmission.

The majority also concluded that the case isn’t moot even after the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) in 2023 rescinded the mandate. That move only came after the appeals court heard arguments in the case, and comments from district board members indicated the mandate could be reimposed in the future. In 2021, the district added an option for employees to be frequently tested for COVID-19 in lieu of a vaccine after being sued, only to remove the option after a different suit was thrown out.

“LAUSD’s pattern of withdrawing and then reinstating its vaccination policies is enough to keep this case alive,” Judge Nelson said.

He was joined by U.S. Circuit Judge Daniel Collins.

The ruling remanded the case back to Judge Fischer “for further proceedings under the correct legal standard.”

In a concurring opinion, Judge Collins said the allegations in the case implicate “the fundamental right to refuse medical treatment,” pointing to more recent Supreme Court rulings, including a 1997 decision in which the court stated that the “‘right of a competent individual to refuse medical treatment’ was ‘entirely consistent with this nation’s history and constitutional traditions,’ in light of ’the common-law rule that forced medication was a battery, and the long legal tradition protecting the decision to refuse unwanted medical treatment.'”

In a dissent, U.S. Circuit Judge Michael Daly Hawkins said that the school district “has averred that, absent a very unlikely return to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, it will not reinstate the policy.”

“Neither the speculative possibility of a future pandemic nor LAUSD’s power to adopt another vaccination policy save this case,” the judge said.

Judges Nelson and Collins were appointed by President Donald Trump. Judge Hawkins is an appointee of President Bill Clinton. Judge Fischer is an appointee of President George W. Bush.

Leslie Manookian, president of the Health Freedom Defense Fund, said in a statement that the Ninth Circuit’s ruling “made clear that American’s [sic] cherished rights to self-determination, including the sacred right of bodily autonomy in matters of health, are not negotiable.”

LAUSD didn’t respond to a request for comment.

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In markets, Goldman's Ariana Contessa wrote in a note to clients that Monday kicked off the bank's 45th Annual GS Healthcare Conference in Miami.

Contessa pointed out, "Largest takeaway was what was NOT said from VAX players re: the Ninth Circuit Ruling around vaccines, causing the group to underperform."

"Our desk was much better for sale in Biotech vs better to buy in large cap Pharma," the analyst noted. 

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