This Article is From Sep 19, 2015

Autistic Son is 'Public Nuisance', Says Lawsuit on Indian Couple

Autistic Son is 'Public Nuisance', Says Lawsuit on Indian Couple

Representational Image

California: An Indian couple in California is facing a lawsuit over the behaviour of their autistic son. It has forced them to give up their house in which they had lived for seven years.

Vidyut Gopal, a silicon valley engineer and his wife Parul Agrawal, who is a research scientist at NASA, have left the Sunnyvale City neighbourhood after two other families living in the area filed a lawsuit which called their autistic child a 'public nuisance', according to local media reports.

When neighbors complained about the child's alleged pulling children's hair, biting a woman and other menacing behavior, the couple hired caregivers, gave the boy special medication, and put him in therapeutic classes, a local paper reported on Thursday.

The couple's legal battle has sparked outrage among parents of children with autism, raising troubling questions about how to coexist with neighbors with special needs kids.

"This has been pretty devastating for us, but we are doing our best to cope with it," said the father.

The lawsuit, which was filed last year, alleges that the boy's disruptive behavior also created an "unquantified chilling effect on the otherwise 'hot' local real estate market" and that "people feel constrained in the marketability of their homes as this issue remains unresolved and the nuisance remains unabated."

A Santa Clara County Superior Court judge last October issued a preliminary injunction against them to ensure their son does not strike, assault, or batter anyone in the neighborhood or their personal property.

The case will return to court on Tuesday, when a judge will hear arguments about whether the complainants should have access to the boy's school and medical records, the paper said.

The couple, meanwhile, said they remain focused on helping their son, hoping that this case "will raise awareness about autism and educate the public" about the challenges that families of children with autism face.
.