New Jersey appeals court requires conversion therapy practice to pay $3.5 million in legal fees
Jews Offering New Alternatives to Healing agreed to dissolve in settling consumer fraud lawsuit, but reopened and began operating under another name.
Photo: Jon Tyson, via Unsplash.
A New Jersey appeals court has ruled that a Jewish conversion therapy practice must pay $3.5 million to former clients after it breached the terms of a settlement agreement that reduced the group’s financial liability.
On Tuesday, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey upheld a lower court’s ruling finding that the Jewish Institute for Global Awareness (JIFGA), formerly known as Jews Offering New Alternatives to Healing, had violated the terms of a settlement agreement reached with plaintiffs in December 2015, six months after a New Jersey jury found the organization had violated New Jersey’s consumer fraud law.
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