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Posted: 2024-05-20 08:11:44

The father of an eight-year-old girl who died after her insulin was withheld on religious grounds, was only baptised into the religious group four months before her death, a Brisbane court heard on Monday.

The baptism came two years after an earlier incident in which the little girl almost died before being taken to hospital, in similar circumstances.

New detail about the Toowoomba religious group, known as The Saints, was revealed in a Supreme Court hearing, involving 14 members who are charged with the little girl's death.

Elizabeth Struhs, a type 1 diabetic, was found dead in her Rangeville home in Toowoomba, west of Brisbane, on January 7, 2022, after she allegedly had her insulin medication withheld for days.

It is alleged the group of six men and eight women, which included her parents, prayed to God to heal her, rather than seeking medical attention and held a belief that "God would heal".

The group is facing a pre-trial hearing to determine admissibility of evidence ahead of their trial in July.

Among those facing charges are the parents of Elizabeth Struhs, along with the alleged leader of The Saints, 62-year-old Brendan Luke Stevens.

An artists drawing of a man wearing glasses

Elizabeth's father, Jason Richard Struhs.(ABC Southern Queensland: Kemii McGuire)

Mr Stevens and Elizabeth's father, Jason Richard Struhs, 52, are both charged with murder. Elizabeth's mother, Kerrie Elizabeth Struhs, 49, and 11 other alleged members of The Saints, all face charges of manslaughter.

The 14 accused did not appear in person at Monday's hearing and appeared instead via video-link from three different prisons.

All have opted not to have lawyers representing them and are all held in custody, after not applying for bail.

Crown Prosecutor Caroline Marco told the court each of the defendants was a member of a congregation that adhered to a belief "that God heals and that medication is to be rejected unless it is in the nature of no more than first aid, such as applying a bandaid".

"The congregation membership is finite in number. It consists of three families, each family member is a part of the congregation," Ms Marco said.

She said out of the total 23 people in the congregation, the 14 defendants in this case were all the adult members of the group.

a court artist's sketch of a large group of people in a courtroom

All 14 people charged over the death of Elizabeth Struhs fronted court in Brisbane in November last year.(ABC News: Sharon Gordon)

Ms Marco further revealed that Elizabeth Struhs's father, Jason, was only baptised into the group on August 21, 2021.

This was well after his daughter Elizabeth was taken to Toowoomba hospital in July 2019.

"He wasn't a member of the congregation that was adhering to this faith at the time he was interviewed or provided his sworn statement to police or that he gave that evidence at trial. He was baptised on 21 August, 2021," Ms Marco told the court.

Mr Struhs's baptism was about one month after Elizabeth's mother, Kerrie Struhs, was convicted and sentenced, on July 15, 2021, to 18 months jail in the Toowoomba District Court.

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