Woman Escorted Off Bus For Reading Bible Aloud
FORT WORTH (CBS 11 News) ― A
passenger on a Fort Worth bus says the T. Bus Service discriminated
against her religion.
Christine Lutz says she was reading her Bible to her children when
the bus driver asked her to stop or get off the bus.
Lutz, a Seventh Day Adventist, and her children were on their way to
church.
"She then said, 'Well I don't think this is the place or the
time to do so.' And I said, 'Oh, but it's the perfect time and the
perfect place since it is our Sabbath and it is the time with the
Lord and therefore I'm going to continue.' And I continued,"
she explained.
Then, a TRE supervisor came on board. Lutz also told him that she
would not stop reading. She and her family were escorted off the
bus.
"This was definitely a clear cut case of persecution," she
said.
Or was it a clear cut case of policy?
"Anyone who is loud will be asked to be quiet," said
representative Joan Hunter. "That is a standard policy across
country in the transit industry."
It doesn't matter what is said, the T has a policy of no loud or
abusive behavior.
"It's only if the other passengers will complain, or it's
obviously so loud it's distracting the operator, that we will ask
them to stop," Hunter explained.
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