Court rules in Georgia case on student's view of 'gays'
Associated Press - 12/20/2011 7:20:00
Jennifer Keeton (ADF client, Augusta State Univ.)Associated Press - A federal court has upheld a ruling that Augusta State University in Georgia was within its rights to require a graduate school counseling student to keep her biblical views on homosexuals to herself.
A three-judge panel ruled that the university was following protocol when it put Jennifer Keeton on a remediation plan and threatened to expel her after she repeatedly said she would have difficulty working with homosexual clients. (See earlier story re-posted immediately below this story.)
Earlier story dated 8/4/2010
Judge says 'remediation' lawful, student appeals
Bill Bumpas - OneNewsNow - 8/24/2010 3:45
A federal judge has rejected a graduate student's lawsuit that claimed a university in Georgia was forcing her to abandon her Christian beliefs in order to receive a counseling degree. (See earlier story)
Jennifer Keeton (ADF client, Augusta State Univ.)U.S. District Judge Randal Hall ruled Friday that Augusta State University can expel Jennifer Keeton if she does not follow a "remediation plan" assigned by her professors -- a requirement Hall described as "academically legitimate." Keeton had been asked to complete the plan after she said she believed homosexual behavior was morally wrong and that she would then help such clients change that behavior. Read earlier story here at onenewsnow web site.
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