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In July 2020, readers asked us about the circumstances surrounding the passing of Carsyn Leigh Davis, a 17-year-old from Fort Myers, Florida, who died after contracting the COVID-19 coronavirus disease weeks earlier. In particular, readers asked us to examine the accuracy of news reports and online posts that claimed Davis had died 13 days after attending a COVID party at her family's church. The website Raw Story published an article with the headline Florida Teen Dies After Conspiracy Theorist Mom Takes Her to Church 'COVID Party' and Tries to Treat Her With Trump-Approved Drug: Report. The article went on: A Florida mother took her high-risk teenage daughter to a 'COVID party' at their church, tried treating the girl at home with unproven drugs when she got sick — and then hailed her as a patriot after she died. The claim that Davis had attended a COVID party appears to have originated in a July 5 blog post on the website FloridaCovidVictims.com, which wrote that: She [Davis] had survived cancer, her mom reported, and was a caring and giving person. She was known for her huge heart and good nature, despite all of her health problems. She had nearly died as a child, but developed a strength and love of life that made everyone around her smile. So then why in God’s name did her mother take her to a 'COVID Party' at their church on June 10 to intentionally expose her immuno-compromised daughter to this virus? ... On June 10, Carysn’s [sic] mom, Carole, took Carsyn, a 16-year-old girl who was immuno-compromised with a history of health issues (including cancer), to a 'COVID party' at her church, where more than 100 children without masks were in attendance. The COVID party claim was subsequently repeated in articles and posts published by Newsweek, the Daily Kos, and Alternet. Davis did die of complications from COVID-19, with several underlying health problems as contributory causes. On June 10, she did attend an event at her local youth church at the First Assembly of God in Fort Myers. However, reports that it was a COVID party were inaccurate and based on a gross misrepresentation of real descriptions of the event. An investigations report by the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner Department provided the following account of Davis' death: The report specified that Davis' cause of death was Complications of COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) Pneumonia, with the following listed as contributory causes: Hypothalamic-Pituitary Axis Dysfunction, Morbid Obesity, Bronchial Asthma. It's not clear how or where Davis contracted COVID-19. According to the medical examiner's report, she first developed symptoms three days after attending a church event with 100 other children. However, COVID-19 symptoms can take between two and 14 days to appear after exposure, so it cannot be assumed that Davis caught the virus at the June 10 church event. It's true that Davis' parents did attempt to treat her illness with azithromycin and hydroxychloroquine, a controversial proposed treatment for COVID-19 that has been touted by President Donald Trump. That aspect of the news reports mentioned above was accurate. However, no evidence has been presented to support the claim that the June 10 church event was billed as a COVID party, or was designed as a forum for young people to intentionally or wantonly expose themselves and others to the disease. Rebekah Jones, a data scientist who was fired by the Florida Department of Health after what the department told Snopes was a a repeated course of insubordination and blatant disrespect for her colleagues, first uncovered the medical examiner’s report on Davis’ death. (Jones has insisted she was fired for refusing to manipulate COVID-19-related data, while the Associated Press reported she had repeatedly made unauthorized public comments on the state’s COVID-19 data-collection methods.) That document was first published on FloridaCovidVictims.com, which is run by Florida Covid Action, an alternative provider of COVID-19 data in Florida, and an initiative by Jones and others. On Twitter, Jones posted what appeared to be a screenshot taken from the Facebook page of First Youth Church at the First Assembly of God in Fort Myers — the Davis family's church. In a June 10 post, First Youth Church wrote: Service is back and better than ever! We will be having our Release Party in the gym TONIGHT at 6:45. There will be games, awesome giveaways, free food, a DJ and music, and the start of our new sermon series. AND we'll be starting Summer Nights afterwords [sic] with karaoke and basketball! We hope to see you there! It was Jones, and not the church itself, who described the June 10 event as a COVID party, and the screenshot, presented as evidence by Jones, actually undermines her own contention that the event attended by Davis and others was a COVID party. The FloridaCovidVictims.com blog post was especially misleading, because it placed quotation marks around the phrase COVID party, falsely indicating that that description originated with the organizers themselves. On July 7, in response to the news reports mentioned above, the First Assembly of God posted a strongly worded news release on Facebook, firmly rejecting claims that the church had hosted a COVID party: Over the past 24 hours First Assembly of God of Fort Myers has been accused of hosting 'COVID-19 parties.' Nothing could be farther from the truth. First Assembly of God of Fort Myers is following all of the health protections and protocols recommended by the state and local government with regard to holding its church services. Let us be clear — media reports and postings accusing the church of ignoring protocols or actively engaging in behavior intended to expose our congregation to the virus are absolutely false and defamatory. The statement added that claims of a COVID party were based upon irresponsible speculation and inaccurate information. Although the medical examiner's report notes that Davis herself did not wear a mask at the June 10 event, it's unclear whether others did. Snopes sent a list of questions to First Assembly of God officials, including asking what COVID-19 mitigation guidelines or rules, if any, the church had implemented during the Release Party. We did not receive a response of any kind in time for publication. Pastor David Thomas told WBBH that the church had taken unspecified precautions to ensure the safety of children at the event, but that it was left to individual children to decide whether to practice social distancing. This indicates that any official church enforcement of social distancing at the event was relaxed. After initial publication, several news outlets and websites updated their articles to reflect the fact that the characterization of the June 10 event as a COVID party had come from others, and not from the youth church organizers themselves. FloridaCovidVictims.com, whose original blog post formed the basis of several other articles, later removed all references to a COVID party, instead describing the June 10 event as a large youth event at her church, where more than 100 children without masks were in attendance. The updated post did not provide evidence to substantiate the claim that the 100 children in attendance did not wear masks. Newsweek replaced the phrase coronavirus party with church party in its headline, and Raw Story replaced church 'COVID party' with church event in its headline, adding the following note: Jones’ analysis of the medical examiner’s report suggested that Davis had intentionally exposed her daughter to the virus at the event, but there’s no additional evidence to support that claim. This report has been updated to reflect subsequent reporting on the teen’s illness. At the time of this Snopes reporting, neither the Daily Kos nor Alternet had published similar updates or corrections.
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