
Doctor and Hospital Settle Circumcision Lawsuit
Stage Set for Men to Sue for Being Circumcised as Infants
April
25, 2003
SUFFOLK
COUNTY, New York – After a two-and-a-half year legal
battle with plaintiff William G. Stowell, the doctor and
hospital have settled the landmark circumcision case
brought against them. The terms of the settlements have
not been publicly disclosed. Twenty-one-year old Stowell
filed suit December 19, 2000, in the U. S. District
Court for the Eastern District of New York, against the
hospital where he was circumcised and the physician who
circumcised him as a newborn.
Stowell, born on December 22, 1981, in West Islip,
NY, was circumcised the following day by his mother’s
obstetrician. This case presented the issue of the legal
validity of consent for circumcision obtained by a nurse
from a mother who was debilitated by the effects of a
Caesarian section and painkillers. It also questioned
whether a physician could legally and ethically remove
healthy, normal tissue from a non-consenting minor for
non-therapeutic reasons.
David J. Llewellyn, one of Plaintiff Stowell’s
attorneys, said, “William and I are very happy that we
were able to resolve this case with both the hospital
and the doctor. While a settlement is never an admission
of liability, I believe it shows that our allegations
were taken seriously. Never again can someone say that a
young man who is dissatisfied with his circumcision as
an infant is being frivolous when he objects to his
mutilation and brings suit to obtain justice. This
case should send a message to doctors that they run the
risk of a lawsuit each time they circumcise an infant
for non-therapeutic reasons, particularly when they rely
on the hospital to obtain consent the day after birth.
Social or cosmetic concerns provide no
justification for harmful surgery.
I would expect that this is just the first of
many cases that will be brought by angry circumcised
young men against their circumcisers.”
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) first
acknowledged that there was no medical justification for
routine circumcision in 1971. Last year, the AAP
reaffirmed that it does not recommend routine
circumcision. The
American Medical Association concurred this year,
calling routine circumcision “non-therapeutic.” No
national or international medical organization
recommends routine circumcision.
The case has received national attention from Good Morning
America, Newsweek, The New York Post, and other
prominent media sources.
XXX
John
L. Juliano of East Northport, New York, and David J.
Llewellyn of Conyers, Georgia, represented Mr. Stowell.
Mr.
Llewellyn, who regularly represents the victims of
circumcision throughout the country, can be reached at
1-770-918-1911.