Las Vegas Review-Journal

Parents to present new evidence in ill baby case

U.K. court sets ruling after emotional hearing

- By Caroline Spiezio The Associated Press

LONDON — A British court on Monday gave the parents of 11-month-old Charlie Gard a chance to present fresh evidence that their terminally ill son should receive experiment­al treatment.

The decision came after an emotionall­y charged hearing in the wrenching case, during which Gard’s mother wept in frustratio­n and his father yelled at a lawyer.

Judge Nicholas Francis gave the couple until Wednesday afternoon to present the evidence and set a new hearing for Thursday in a case that has drawn internatio­nal attention.

But the judge insisted there had to be “new and powerful” evidence to reverse earlier rulings that barred Charlie from traveling abroad for treatment and authorized London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital to take him off life support.

“There is not a person alive who would not want to save Charlie,” Francis said. “If there is new evidence I will hear it.”

Charlie suffers from mitochondr­ial depletion syndrome, a rare genetic disease that has left him brain damaged and unable to breathe unaided. His parents want to bring him abroad for experiment­al therapy, which they say offers their son a chance of improvemen­t.

But British and European courts have sided with the hospital’s decision that the 11-month-old’s life support should end, saying therapy would not help and would cause more suffering.

The re-opening of the case at London’s High Court may allow Charlie to receive the experiment­al treatment at his current hospital or abroad.

Great Ormond Street Hospital applied for another court hearing because of “new evidence relating to potential treatment for his condition.”

The applicatio­n came after both Pope Francis and President Donald Trump fueled internatio­nal attention to the case, with hospitals in Rome and the U.S. offering to provide Charlie the experiment­al therapy.

The case pits the rights of parents to decide what’s best for their children against the authoritie­s with responsibi­lity for ensuring that people who can’t speak for themselves receive the most appropriat­e care.

Under British law, it is normal for courts to intervene when parents and doctors disagree on the treatment of a child — such as cases where a parent’s religious beliefs prohibit blood transfusio­ns. The rights of the child take primacy, rather than the rights of parents to make the call.

Charlie’s parents, Chris Gard and Connie Yates, have received wide public support, while right-to-life groups have intervened in their cause. Americans United for Life chief executive Catherine Glenn Foster was in London on Monday to support the couple.

“Today is a victory for poor Charlie and Chris and Connie over Great Ormond Street Hospital,” Foster said after the judge ruled. “There is a tremendous amount of hope here.”

 ??  ?? The Associated Press Eleven-month-old baby Charlie Gard, at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, has mitochondr­ial depletion syndrome, a rare genetic disease.
The Associated Press Eleven-month-old baby Charlie Gard, at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, has mitochondr­ial depletion syndrome, a rare genetic disease.

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