Australian Court Convicts 14 Members of Religious Group of Manslaughter for Denying Girl Life-Saving Diabetes Medication

New York Times
14 Convicted in Death of Girl for Depriving Her of Insulin

Elizabeth Rose Struhs died at her family’s home on Jan. 7, 2022, four days after her father stopped administering the insulin needed for her Type 1 diabetes. As she grew weaker and fell unconscious, members of the sect gathered around her and sang and prayed rather than seeking medical help, according to the court decision. Mr. Stevens, who led a small church based out of his home in Toowoomba, in the northeastern state of Queensland, claimed during the trial that the criminal case was religious persecution. Members of the church, who sometimes referred to themselves as “the Saints,” held a fervent belief in the healing power of God and that medical care would go against their faith.

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New York Times
AP NEWS
14 members of an Australian religious group are convicted over diabetic girl’s death

Two bereaved parents and 12 fellow members of an Australian religious congregation accused of killing an 8-year-old girl by withholding her diabetes medication were found guilty on Wednesday of manslaughter. Elizabeth Rose Struhs died on Jan. 7, 2022 at her family’s home in Toowoomba in Queensland state after six days without her prescribed insulin shots for type-1 diabetes. Her father, Jason Richard Struhs, 53, and the leader of the family’s religious group called “The Saints,” Brendan Luke Stevens, 63, had been charged with the more serious crime of murder, but Queensland Supreme Court Justice Martin Burns found both guilty of her manslaughter. Burns also found another 12 members of the congregation, including the victim’s mother, Kerrie Elizabeth Struhs, 49, and the victim’s bother Zachary Alan Struhs, 22, guilty of manslaughter. No one charged escaped conviction.

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AP NEWS
Gulf News
14 Australian sect members convicted over girl's death

The small, home-based church in the Queensland city of Toowoomba held a "core belief" in the healing power of God, leaving no room for medical care or treatment, Justice Martin Burns said in a written judgement. The young girl died of ketoacidosis - a severe complication of diabetes - after her insulin medication was halted for several days, the court heard. "Until her death, Elizabeth Rose Struhs was a vibrant, happy child with, of course, her whole life ahead of her," the judge said. She was lovingly cared for "in almost every way" by her parents and adored by members of the religious group, he said. But "she was deprived of the one thing that would most definitely have kept her alive - insulin". The girl's father Jason Struhs had told police that she was "bouncin' around, playin'" at first but over the following days was "slowly gettin' weaker and weaker", court documents showed.

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Elizabeth Rose Struhs’s parents and members of religious sect guilty of her manslaughter
Elizabeth Rose Struhs died on 7 January 2022 at home in Toowoomba, Queensland, after six days without insulin injections for her type 1 diabetes.
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Australia: Sect members convicted over 8-year-old's death – DW – 01/29/2025
14 members of a Christian sect found guilty of causing the death of an 8-year-old. The girl died in January 2022 after the treatment was withdrawn on religious grounds. The sect held a "core belief" in God's healing power to the exclusion of medical care.
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Religious sect followers prayed and sang as an 8-year-old died. All 14 have been found guilty of manslaughter
14 members of a small religious sect in Australia have been found guilty of manslaughter. Elizabeth Struhs’s parents were among members of the home-based church found guilty. They withheld insulin needed to treat her diabetes because of their unwavering belief that God would heal her. All 14 members had refused to enter a plea, which was accepted as not guilty.
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Elizabeth Struhs: Australian sect members guilty in girl's death
14 members of an Australian religious group have been convicted of the manslaughter of an eight-year-old girl. Elizabeth Struhs died at home in 2022, having suffered from diabetic ketoacidosis, which causes fatally high blood sugar. Her father Jason and the group's leader Brendan Stevens were on trial for murder but were convicted of a lesser charge of manslaughter.
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Australian religious sect members convicted in death of diabetic 8-year-old Elizabeth Struhs - UPI.com
Queensland’s Supreme Court convicted 14 members of an ultra-religious Christian sect of manslaughter in the killing of an 8-year-old diabetic girl by withholding insulin.
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14 Guilty After Girl Dies From Lack of Insulin
14 Australians were found guilty of manslaughter on Wednesday in connection with a diabetic girl's 2022 death. Elizabeth Rose Struhs required insulin for her Type 1 diabetes; her parents chose to withhold it from her, and as she weakened, a dozen members of their religious sect sang and prayed around her. She died after six days without the medication, just before her ninth birthday.
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14 Pentecostal sect members convicted for death of 8-year-old girl denied lifesaving insulin
14 Pentecostal sect members convicted for death of 8-year-old girl. They denied lifesaving insulin because of their religious beliefs. Elizabeth Rose Struhs’ father, mother and brother were convicted of manslaughter. The convicts are all members of a group, which sometimes referred to themselves as ‘the Church’
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14 members of an Australian religious group are convicted over diabetic girl's death
14 members of an Australian religious group are convicted over diabetic girl's death. Elizabeth Rose Struhs died on Jan. 7, 2022 at her family’s home in Toowoomba. Her father, Jason Richard Struhs, 53, and the leader of the religious group called “The Saints” Brendan Luke Stevens, 63, had been charged with the more serious crime of murder.
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Religious sect followers prayed and sang as an 8-year-old died. All 14 have been found guilty of manslaughter
By Hilary Whiteman, CNN Brisbane, Australia (CNN) — Fourteen members of a small religious sect in Australia have been found guilty of the
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Religious sect members who relied on God to save 8yo guilty of manslaughter
A Queensland judge has found 14 members of a hardline religious sect guilty of manslaughter over the death of eight-year-old Elizabeth Struhs. Elizabeth died in early 2022 after having been rushed to hospital in a grave condition due to a lack of insulin to treat her type 1 diabetes. Her father, Jason, and mother, Kerrie, were charged with murder and manslaughter respectively. Supreme Court Justice Martin Burns found the trio, alongside another 11 members of the group, culpable for Elizabeth's death.
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Religious cult found guilty of killing girl, 8, after denying her medicine
Eight-year-old Elizabeth Struhs died at her home in Toowoomba, Australia, in 2022 after suffering from fatally high blood sugar levels. A total of 14 members of the Saints group - including Elizabeth's mother, father and brother - have all been convicted of manslaughter. The group is not affiliated with any established church.
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Australian sect members guilty of causing girl's death
14 members of an Australian religious group have been convicted of killing an eight-year-old diabetic girl. Elizabeth Struhs died at home in 2022, having suffered from diabetic ketoacidosis, which causes fatally high blood sugar. The court heard that Elizabeth's treatment was withheld because the group, known as the Saints, believed God would heal her.
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