Multiple parents have filed lawsuits against Washington, D.C., for allowing children to receive vaccines without parental knowledge or consent.

In a lawsuit filed Monday by the Children’s Health Defense and Parental Rights Foundation against D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, four parents call for a preliminary injunction prohibiting D.C. from enforcing the D.C. Minor Consent for Vaccinations Amendment Act of 2020, which allows children who are 11 years old or older to be deemed “capable of meeting the informed consent standard” to consent to vaccines without their parents’ knowledge or consent.

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“The Minor Consent Act subverts the right and duty of parents to make informed decisions about whether their children should receive vaccinations, by both depriving them of the opportunity to make those decisions and by concealing from parents that their children have been asked to consent to vaccinations or may have indeed been vaccinated,” the lawsuit said. “In fact, the Minor Consent Act states that medical providers who administer vaccines under the Minor Consent Act shall seek reimbursement directly from the insurer without parental knowledge or consent.”

Bowser’s office declined to comment on the matter to The Daily Caller News Foundation. “We do not comment on pending litigation,” John Falcicchio, D.C. deputy mayor for planning and economic development, said Wednesday.

“Providers who administer immunizations under the authority of this subsection shall seek reimbursement, without parental consent, directly from the insurer, which may be Medicaid, Alliance, or private insurance,” the Minor Consent Act said. “The provider shall notify the insurer that the immunization has been provided under the authority of this section.”

All of the parents named in the lawsuit object to the COVID-19 vaccines on religious grounds. Some of the parents formerly obtained childhood vaccines for their children and have since “formed sincere religious objections to vaccinations.”

This is not the first lawsuit of its kind. Joshua Mazer, the father of a 16-year-old daughter, also filed a lawsuit July 2 against Bowser in her capacity as D.C. mayor. Mazer and his daughter reside in Maryland but his daughter traveled to MedStar Georgetown Pediatrics without her parents and requested a vaccine, according to the lawsuit.

The father cited both medical and religious reasons for why he objected to his daughter receiving the vaccine, asserting that the Minor Consent Act “creates an entire structure by which the health care provider, insurance company, school, and health department all engage in an elaborate and deceitful scheme, including lying to the parents, to hide from those parents the fact that their child was vaccinated without parental notification, control, or consent, and all without any finding that a parent is unfit.”

Mazer said his daughter had previously suffered a “severe reaction to a tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis-containing vaccine” when she was 5 years old, requiring “urgent medical treatment,” according to the lawsuit.

A pediatric allergy and immunology specialist wrote a special exemption for Mazer’s daughter from receiving more doses of the pertussis, diphtheria, and tetanus vaccines, according to the lawsuit, which noted that Mazer’s daughter “did not understand that her previous reaction was an allergic reaction.”

When Mazer’s daughter went to MedStar Georgetown Pediatrics to obtain the vaccine, she presented her mother’s insurance card, gave her date of birth, told the hospital that her parents were not with her, and “explained that she wanted to attend a summer camp and needed to receive a vaccine to do same and that her parents would not consent to her receiving this vaccine,” according to the lawsuit.

Dr. Nneka Holder was told that Mazer’s daughter was there without her parents’ knowledge or consent to get the vaccine, the lawsuit said, and Holder and the nurses reportedly congratulated the 16-year-old for “sneaking behind her parents’ back.”

The doctor and nurses also convinced Mazer’s daughter to get the vaccine products Gardasil and MenACWY, the lawsuit said. Holder reportedly encouraged the 16-year-old to return for a further Gardasil booster and “coached” her on “lying in relation to receiving the shots.”

“After an hour and a half of complexity surrounding getting the shots without alerting her parents, the vaccines were finally brought into J.D.’s treating room,” the lawsuit said. “J.D. became nervous upon seeing the shots and voiced that she wanted to leave without getting the shots. At that point, the doctor and nurse positioned themselves in the room such that she felt trapped. After further dialogue and repeating that she no longer wanted the shots, J.D. was able to leave without getting the shots.”

“During her lengthy visit, J.D. was told the vaccines are safe, nothing more,” the lawsuit continued. “She was not provided a VIS (a vaccine information statement) nor any other written information about these products. At no time did anyone ask J.D. whether, for example, she had severe pain or swelling after a previous dose of any vaccine, nor any of the other medical conditions listed on the VIS that parents are told to inform their health care providers about before their child is vaccinated.”

The lawsuit also emphasized that Holder and the nurses did not try to obtain information from Mazer’s daughter about her previous reactions to vaccines “despite the fact that this was the first time they had ever met her and had no information about her medical history.”

MedStar Georgetown did not respond to requests for comment from The Daily Caller News Foundation.

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