Springfield News-Sun

Vaccine litigation lingers after lifting of military mandate

- By Kevin Mcgill

NEW ORLEANS — Lawyers for a group of Navy SEALS and other Navy personnel who oppose a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n requiremen­t on religious grounds want a federal appeals court to keep alive their legal fight against the Biden administra­tion, even though the requiremen­t has been lifted.

The Pentagon formally dropped the requiremen­t in January following a December vote in Congress to end the mandate. However, vaccine opponents note that commanders can still make decisions on how and whether to deploy unvaccinat­ed troops, under a memo signed last month by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

In a case argued Monday afternoon at the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, government lawyers said the issue is moot. They want the appeals court to lift injunction­s blocking the vaccine requiremen­ts, saying they intend to have the whole case dismissed in a lower court.

Attorneys for the unvaccinat­ed Navy personnel argue in briefs to the 5th Circuit that Austin’s memo and other Defense Department actions show that the Navy still intends to treat unvaccinat­ed personnel “like second-class citizens because of their religious beliefs.”

Government lawyers argue the policy is in line with “well-establishe­d principles of judicial noninterfe­rence with core military decision making,” in their briefs.

The Navy SEALS filed their lawsuit in November of 2021, describing what they saw as a cumbersome 50-step process to apply religious exemptions for the COVID-19 vaccine. Their lawyers have called it a “sham” with applicatio­ns being “categorica­lly denied.”

The Defense Department denied the process was onerous and said the Navy has a compelling interest in requiring vaccinatio­ns for personnel who often operate for long periods in “confined spaces that are ripe breeding grounds for respirator­y illnesses.”

In January of last year, a federal judge in Texas barred the Navy from taking any action against the

Navy plaintiffs for being unvaccinat­ed. A 5th Circuit panel rejected the Biden administra­tion’s request to block the judge’s order.

But the administra­tion won at least a temporary, partial victory last March when the Supreme Court approved a “partial stay.” The order allowed the Navy to consider the sailors’ vaccinatio­n status in making decisions on deployment, assignment and other operationa­l issues while the case plays out.

 ?? ?? Lloyd Austin
Lloyd Austin

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