An autistic 13-year-old boy from central Minnesota won't be going back to his family's church anytime soon.
Upholding a May 13 restraining order that barred the teen from the church, Todd County District Judge Sally Ireland Robertson has ruled that 6-foot-2, 225-pound Adam Race engaged in "repeated harassment" and was perceived as a threat by those attending services at the Church of St. Joseph in the town of Bertha.
Robertson said that even though Adam "did not specifically intend to harass anyone," his conduct at church services was "objectively unreasonable" and included "repeated, disruptive or distracting acts, sounds, and gestures."
Robertson's ruling, issued Friday, shocked Adam's mother and reignited concerns among some advocates about how churches, and society as a whole, deal with the needs and issues of autistic children.
"Is this the kind of road and precedents we want to set our kids on with special needs in the future?" said Brad Trahan, founder of the RT Autism Foundation in Rochester and the father of an 8-year-old autistic boy.
"I totally understand that the church environment in this case has to be safe.
"But the bottom line is one out of 150 births includes an autistic child and as a society we have to deal with it. We have to be able to go out to church and restaurants and events as one family.
"There are no winners in this situation. The church doesn't win. The family doesn't win, and Adam doesn't win."