In January 2021, Santa Clara County sued Calvary Chapel Pastor Mike McClure was spared jail time for continuing to hold service during the COVID pandemic.
McClure and his church were ordered to stop hosting indoor services without face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This week an appeals court ruled Calvary Chapel from San Jose will not have to pay around $200,000 in fines over the pastor’s COVID policies.
ABC News reported:
A California church that defied safety regulations during the COVID-19 pandemic by holding large religious services won’t have to pay about $200,000 in fines, a state appeals court ruled.
Calvary Chapel San Jose and its pastors were held in contempt of court and fined in 2020 and 2021 for violating state and county limits on indoor public gatherings. The rules were aimed at preventing the spread through close contract of the virus, which has caused more than 10 million confirmed cases and more than 93,500 deaths since the pandemic began in mid-2020, according to state public health figures.
But on Monday, California’s 6th District Court of Appeal reversed those lower court decisions, citing a May 2020 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in February 2021 that a ban by Gov. Gavin Newsom on indoor worship services in counties where COVID-19 was surging violated freedom of religion.
The decision by a newly conservative majority court came less than a year after the high court previously ruled the ban was justified on health and safety grounds.
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