Religious sect found guilty of manslaughter after prayer fails to heal diabetic girl

Religious sect found guilty of manslaughter after prayer fails to heal diabetic girl
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Religious sect found guilty of manslaughter after prayer fails to heal diabetic girl
Author: Barney Davis
Published: Jan, 29 2025 18:23

Elizabeth Struhs was denied critical insulin by members of The Saints. A young girl died after the religious sect her family were part of denied her vital insulin shots choosing to let God decide whether she lived or died. Elizabeth Struhs, 8, passed away after fringe Christian group The Saints withheld her life-saving medication, believing that God would intervene.

 [Elizabeth was vomiting for six days before she died]
Image Credit: The Independent [Elizabeth was vomiting for six days before she died]

The parents of Elizabeth and 12 members of the home-based religious sect in Australia were convicted of her manslaughter after believing that medical care went against their faith. Young Elizabeth was left to die over six days in January 2022 at her home in Toowoomba, west of Brisbane as members of the cult sang and danced hoping for divine intervention that never came.

 [14 members of The Saints were found guilty at the judge-only trial at Brisbane’s Supreme Court]
Image Credit: The Independent [14 members of The Saints were found guilty at the judge-only trial at Brisbane’s Supreme Court]

The group maintained a vigil around her bed and even after she’d stopped breathing they sang “choruses” and prayed for her “to be raised from the dead by God”. Her father Jason Struhs finally called emergency services 36 hours after his daughter’s death, telling members that “though God would still raise Elizabeth, they could not leave a corpse in the house”.

Handing down the verdicts, Justice Martin Burns said: “Until her death, Elizabeth Rose Struhs was a vibrant, happy child with, of course, her whole life ahead of her. “She left a lasting impression on many with whom she came into contact on the outside, whether through her schooling or during the treatment and control of a medical condition she was first diagnosed with in 2019 – Type 1 diabetes.

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