"From the late 1860s until the 1970s, several American cities had ugly laws making it illegal for persons with "unsightly or disgusting" disabilities to appear in public. Some of these laws were called unsightly beggar ordinances."
Ugly Laws, Wikipedia
Political cartoon stereotyping poor disabled in New York City © Library of Congress |
Today a hearing on discovery motions was scheduled to take place at 9am, in San Jose in the case of R. Flowers, Et Al v V. Gopal, Et Al. The plaintiffs are continuing to demand a permanent injunction against the Gopal family's autistic son, despite the fact that the Gopal family no longer lives in the neighborhood and neither do the Flowers. The plaintiffs claimed that the presence of the Gopal family's child in their neighborhood dropped property values. Actually, the fact that the Flowers' were renters dropped the property value. The Gopal family owned their home. I am trying to grasp how saying a 9 year old child appearing in public can drop property values is not invoking the ancient "Ugly Laws", and how people can feel comfortable putting this on legal documents and presenting it in court in this day and age.
The Autism Society views the potential for harm against families who have autistic loved ones as great if lawsuits of this ilk become a pattern. Sadly they never mention the harm that is being incurred by the child himself or those who share his neurology.
Some experts wonder how this case progressed at all. Quoting the San Jose Mercury News:
Some experts wonder how this case progressed at all. Quoting the San Jose Mercury News:
"Stephen Rosenbaum, a lecturer at the UC Berkeley Law School, who specializes in disability rights and is familiar with the lawsuit, said he is surprised the case has continued as long as it has."
""This is something that should never have gone to court, in my view," said Rosenbaum, who is also an associate professor at Golden Gate University School of Law. Instead, he said, it should have been resolved through an informal dispute resolution process or mediation; sources, however, say that route failed."
I do agree with professor Rosenbaum's professional opinion that an informal dispute process or mediation is the route through which this dispute between three former neighbors should have been resolved. I also believe autism advocate, parent, and attorney James Gallini is quite accurate in his observation of this case:
"This is a very dangerous lawsuit in California and, because of the legal definitions of 'nuisance' and 'public nuisance', dehumanizes our autistic citizens by defining them as something other than human to be controlled or removed and as chattel (an item of property other than real estate). The Judge in this case did enter a temporary injunction against this family and their child. In short, a restraining order to prevent "irreparable harm" to the community and property while the legal issues are being heard."
My fear is that the preponderance of recent court cases are by adjudication placing a de facto label of human chattel on people with invisible disability in general and autism in particular. One could almost define recent legal cases in disability rights case law in California, and I am thinking of cases like San Francisco v Sheehan, as echoing structural ableism remaining from the infamous "Ugly Laws," the first of which appeared in 1867 in, by sad coincidence, San Francisco, California.
Proctors answering document in U.S. v Amistad © National Archives |
In our country, those who are different lose the legal right to any expectation of privacy for themselves and their children.
Poster for Tom Wiggins ©Word Stage |
In fact one of the foundational issues with the way that autism as a disability is dealt with in our society is this attitude that autistic people are de facto chattel unless they continually prove their competence. This frightening attitude is at the heart of deadly results like the infamous case of Kade Hanegraaf, an autistic teen who at 14, was the victim of "debarking" surgery because his parents saw him as "human chattel" and therefore consented to this monstrous procedure. Please see Lydia Brown's moving essay on literal silencing for detailed information here.
I hope you can all see how critical the presumption of competence is to the entire autism community. It continues to confound me that other parents fail to see how critical this is, and how damaging the presumption of the incompetence of our own offspring has been to our community.
In this entire litigation, we do not know:
1. Why Robert and Marci Flowers and their former neighbors insist on continuing this legal action when the Gopal family moved away from the neighborhood months ago, and the Flowers have since moved from it as well, and how this pursuit of monetary gain through legal action despite the fact that the Gopal family has done everything to accommodate the plaintiffs, including leaving their home of seven years, is not discrimination based on the child's disability;
2. What the autistic child in question's ability to communicate is, and whether he can communicate and therefore give testimony in his own defense;
3. Why there has been no mention of the child's rights under the Olmstead decision and the ABA to community access with supports, and whether or not, once behavioral supports were put in place for this young man whenever he entered the local community, the continuance of this case actually violates of the child's right to community access.
4. Whether the court's injunction was made after the child left the community in question, which would make no sense and whether further permanent injunctions in light of the fact that both one of the plaintiff families and the defendant family no longer reside in that community, are violating their rights as well.
5. What has been done on the part of the defense team to insure the Gopal family is not being targeted based on their ethnicity and insure no bias is present in the court proceedings against them? How much of what is going on here is simply a lack of understanding of cultural differences that have led to this escalation?
Most of what has driven this case, and what drives this type of lawsuit is the goal of monetary gain against defendants who appear wealthy. It seems past time for privileged autism families to take notice. This case is dangerous because it can give bad people the idea that they can trump up charges against autistic people who may be unable to respond or defend themselves and sue wealthy autism families for damages. It is also a dangerous byproduct of the way autism is presented by organizations who insist on displaying autistic children and adults as helpless, raging, human chattel, thus stripping them of human rights, destroying their access to their communities and causing great harm to those who they claim to advocate for. Our community needs to urgently work to change how the public and the legal system view autistic children and adults. If we don't, our loved ones will pay the consequences.
Resources and References:
-------------------------------
R. Flowers, Et Al Vs V. Gopal, Et Al
http://tinyurl.com/njfoezw
http://www.sfautismsociety.org/blog/neighbor-lawsuit-seeks-to-declare-autistic-boy-a-public-nuisance
http://www.contracostatimes.com/breaking-news/ci_28832427/sunnyvale-neighbors-sue-banish-autistic-boys-family-claiming
San Francisco v Sheehan
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/05/18/3659969/supreme-court-justices-wont-let-mentally-ill-woman-sue-police-shot/
http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/city-and-county-of-san-francisco-california-v-sheehan/
Harm from the "Human Chattel" attitude embedded in Structural Ableism
The Literal Silencing of Kade Hanegraaf
http://www.autistichoya.com/2013/09/literal-silencing.html
http://www.salon.com/2013/09/27/is_surgically_altering_an_autistic_boys_voice_cruel_or_kind/
Violation of Disabled Bodies for Caregiver convenience - The Case of Ashley X
http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1574851,00.html
-------------------------------
R. Flowers, Et Al Vs V. Gopal, Et Al
http://tinyurl.com/njfoezw
http://www.sfautismsociety.org/blog/neighbor-lawsuit-seeks-to-declare-autistic-boy-a-public-nuisance
http://www.contracostatimes.com/breaking-news/ci_28832427/sunnyvale-neighbors-sue-banish-autistic-boys-family-claiming
San Francisco v Sheehan
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/05/18/3659969/supreme-court-justices-wont-let-mentally-ill-woman-sue-police-shot/
http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/city-and-county-of-san-francisco-california-v-sheehan/
Harm from the "Human Chattel" attitude embedded in Structural Ableism
The Literal Silencing of Kade Hanegraaf
http://www.autistichoya.com/2013/09/literal-silencing.html
http://www.salon.com/2013/09/27/is_surgically_altering_an_autistic_boys_voice_cruel_or_kind/
Violation of Disabled Bodies for Caregiver convenience - The Case of Ashley X
http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1574851,00.html
Lifelong Violation of Human Rights: The Case of Autistic Savant Blind Tom Wiggins
http://www.blindtom.org/who_was_blind_tom.html
Kidnapped Africans as "Human Chattel" In American Caselaw:
https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/amistad/proctors-answer.html
http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/amistad/Ami_trialrep.html
http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/amistad/AMI_BBAL.HTM
The Ugly Laws
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ugly_law
https://madeinamericathebook.wordpress.com/2011/01/19/ugly-or-needy/
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2006681441/
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