"In light of the Covid-19 virus, and the consensus that it arose from a zoonotic cause, many people have been questioning how the city can possibly allow Kaporos to take place this year."
Anti-Kapporos crusaders are relaunching a legal attack against the
Orthodox Jewish ritual — which involves slitting throats of tens of
thousands of live chickens in the streets of New York City — arguing the
novel coronavirus pandemic presents new evidence it’s harmful to human
health.
“This is a real danger now that needs to be recognized,” attorney Nora
Marino said. “It’s not about what could happen, it’s about what has
happened.”
Marino, who represents the Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos (the name has
multiple accepted spellings) filed this month a motion to renew her case —
struck down in 2018 by the New York Court of Appeals — and compel the NYPD
to enforce Health Department codes she says are routinely broken during the
pre-Yom Kippur atonement ritual.
Background
In early July, 2020, attorney Nora Constance Marino announced that “In light of the Covid-19 virus, and the consensus that it arose from a zoonotic cause, many people have been questioning how the city can possibly allow Kaporos to take place this year. On that premise, I have moved to ‘renew’ my prior motion from 2015, and have asked the lower court to reconsider its decision of 2015, in light of ‘new evidence’ -- the new evidence being the emergence and occurrence of Covid-19. I also had air samples taken from various Kaporos locations in 2019, which indicated dangerous pathogens in the air, and included that as ‘new evidence’ as well. There are additional items of new evidence, also included in my arguments.”
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