Houston Chronicle

Galveston school claims religious exemption from ‘KKK origami’ lawsuit

- By Mike Snyder mike.snyder@chron.com twitter.com/chronsnyde­r

AGalveston school is claiming a religious exemption from a lawsuit alleging that an African-American child was subjected to racist bullying that involved so-called “KKK origami.”

In an Aug. 1 filing in state district court, attorneys for Trinity Episcopal School argue that the lawsuit must be dismissed because of “broad protection­s for the free exercise of religion” in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on.

“As a religious institutio­n, Trinity has a constituti­onally protected freedom to make decisions regarding the discipline of its students without judicial interferen­ce,” states the filing, first reported by the Galveston County Daily News.

The suit was filed in May against Trinity; its headmaster, the Rev. David Dearman; and the

parents of three students alleged to have been responsibl­e for the bullying.

Among other acts, the lawsuit says the students handed origami that resembled a Ku Klux Klan member’s hood to the boy and claimed their parents were affiliated with the organizati­on. The boy was enrolled at Trinity from 2014 to 2016.

Because of the bullying, the lawsuit states, the child experience­d depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts.

Trinity’s response states that the lawsuit asks the court to review disciplina­ry decisions taken by the school in response to complaints by the child’s mother. Because of the Constituti­on’s protection­s on the practice of religion, however, “the courts cannot second-guess these decisions, even in the guise of purportedl­y ‘secular’ causes of action arising from tort principles,” the filing states.

The case is being heard by state District Judge Michelle Slaughter.

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Handout photo

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