News
Lambda Legal Files Federal Lawsuit Against Assisted Living Facility Following Eviction of HIV-Positive Retired Minister
‘They shunned and rejected him, making him feel like a complete outcast.’
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
(Little Rock, Ark., May 12, 2009) — Lambda Legal announced today that it has filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas against Fox Ridge of North Little Rock, an assisted living facility.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of 75–year–old Reverend Dr. Robert Franke, a retired university provost and Unitarian-Universalist minister, and his daughter, Sara Franke Bowling.
Dr. Franke, who relocated to Little Rock to be closer to his daughter, moved in to Fox Ridge after fulfilling all of its residency requirements — including submission of medical evaluation forms from a local physician. The next day, however — after realizing Dr. Franke is HIV-positive — Fox Ridge officials abruptly ejected Dr. Franke from the facility. A Fox Ridge staffer told Bowling her father's personal belongings could remain, but that the "body" had to be out by the end of the day.
"I was stunned that my dad was thrown out of his new home," said Bowling. "The people at Fox Ridge were supposed to make sure that he was comfortable and cared for, and instead they shunned and rejected him, making him feel like a complete outcast."
Dr. Franke requires no special medical attention beyond daily medication and regular check–ups with a physician, and Fox Ridge is licensed by the state to provide Dr. Franke with the kind of care he and his daughter were seeking for him.
"Federal and state laws exist to protect people from just this sort of unjust treatment," said Scott Schoettes, HIV Project staff attorney for Lambda Legal. "Unfortunately, this is something we are seeing far too frequently, all across the country. Those tasked with caring for our elderly loved ones need to know that it is illegal to discriminate against someone with HIV based on outdated and misguided beliefs about its transmission."
Franke and Bowling are seeking damages under the Fair Housing Act, the Arkansas Civil Rights Act and the Arkansas Fair Housing Act, as well as an injunction, under those laws and the Americans with Disabilities Act, preventing Fox Ridge from continuing to engage in this kind of conduct.
"This is about doing the right thing," said Franke. "I want to make sure it doesn't happen to anyone else — because no one should ever be made to feel the way I did."
Scott Schoettes, HIV Project Staff Attorney, and Kenneth Upton, Supervising Senior Staff Attorney, are handling the case for Lambda Legal. They are joined by co–counsel Gary L. Sullivan of the Tripcony Law Firm in Little Rock, Arkansas.