Students, Accused of Lesbianism and Expelled, Sue School Association
Two former students of Cal Lutheran High and their parents have filed suit against the California Lutheran High School Association claiming discrimination, invasion of privacy and unfair business practices after the students, who were suspected of having a lesbian relationship with each other, were interrogated by Cal Lutheran High’s principal, Gregory Bork, and expelled because, quoting this North County Times article, “the school has a spiritual and moral obligation to keep its students from sin.”
At the start of this school year, the faculty suspected that the two students may have had homosexual ideas or might have been intimate with each other, court documents state. The lawsuit does not name the students or parents to protect their privacy, it states.
On Sept. 7, the students were called into a meeting with the principal, the lawsuit states.
“Bork individually and separately interrogated the (students) in a closed room, without the parents’ knowledge or consent … and asked (them) inappropriate and personal questions such as whether they loved one another and were lesbians,” court documents state. “In such a manner, Bork coerced one of the (students) to admit that she ‘loves’ the other.”
The next day, Bork allegedly called the students’ parents and said the school’s board had met and decided the students were not to come back to the school, the lawsuit states. The day after that, the parents confronted Bork in person and by phone, and he responded that the two girls could not stay at Cal Lutheran “with those feelings,” according to the lawsuit.
In a Sept. 15 letter to the students’ parents, Bork wrote that “while there is no open physical contact between the two girls, there is still a bond of intimacy … characteristic of a lesbian (relationship). … Such a relationship is unchristian. To allow the girls to attend (Cal Lutheran) … would send a message to students and parents that we either condone this situation and/or will not do anything about it. That message would not reflect our beliefs and principles.”
Christopher Hayes, the attorney representing the two girls, believes that Cal Lutheran High’s actions violate California’s Unruh Civil Rights Act, which prohibits businesses from discriminating based on sexual orientation. He claims anti-discrimination rights override the school’s constitutional rights of freedom of association and freedom of religion.

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[...] Back in December I posted about two students who filed suit against the California Lutheran High School Association after being expelled from California Lutheran High School because of their alleged lesbian relationship. On Monday, Superior Court Judge Gloria Connor Trask refused to dismiss the lawsuit. She dropped one count, the allegation that “the school blocked the teens’ chance for their pursuit of happiness,” of the seven included in the suit and denied a request of $25,000 in punitive damages. The lawsuit will now continue on, still including allegations of “false imprisonment, violation of fair business practices, invasion of privacy and discrimination based on sexual orientation.” Attorneys for the Wildomar school told Superior Court Judge Gloria Connor Trask on Monday that the school is a private, religious organization and the suit should be thrown out. Trask allowed the suit to continue, although she did throw out one of the seven counts. [...]