Alan isn't the only one who would be involved in such a test case, and they know it. What they fear most is exposure. They are going to get it.
I'm tempted to contribute more about the issue you raise, but will wait for another forum. JT is correct on the DA, but permit a little expansion, without my going into the theological stuff on origins of the DA. Legal has picked up on this as a potent tool, and is pushing its use. Key point:
The locals DF you.
You DA yourself.
If the prime directive is to protect, i.e., organizational survival at all costs, with the objective of less liability, legal and otherwise, then it is highly desirable for them to say YOU did something. The current position is to get one to sign something or write something at almost any cost, just so they can avoid liability. In one case, their pressuresome appeal was: "Well, if this is a matter of your own feelings and conscience, do the MANLY thing, write a letter." In another case: "Only cowards won't put their feelings in writing, blah, blah."
Unless it has been updated very recently, the following statement is to be read upon disassociation:
"By his chosen course------------------- has shown that he no longer
desires to be one of Jehovah’s Witnesses."
Under some circumstances the phrase may be used: "You will be glad to know that spiritual shepherds are endeavoring to render assistance."
In BOTH the DA and DF, the door is wide open, and the audience and congregation is left to speculate on what kind of heinous conduct the individual may have REALLY indulged in. But in the DA, the elders can wash their hands, tut-tut, and disclaim responsibility. And further up the hierarchy they can breathe a sigh of relief.
Important note: Taking blood or illegal fractions (unrepentantly, of course) mandates a DA rather than DF situation. Obviously this mitigates against liability I've alluded to, and is the precise reason for the change in policy, transmitted orally by the CO to elders in 2000 in the US. Purely pragmatic, not doctrinal.
Cygnus, yours is a fascinating case. (Don't mean to sound like some MD looking at a bad leg rather than the guy with the pain.) I've scented this odor before. What I mean is that this smells of your bumping into the good-old-boy stuff behind the scenes, involving either locals or your CO, or the Service Department. Was yours a situation that could not have been ignored? Bet a large sum that this provoked some hot discussion in Service. Clearly the hardliner(s) won.
Now they are faced with what to do in the case of active JWs who don't/won't shun you .... I love it. The non-hardliners wait for the consequences, while the hardliners are hoist on their own petard.
Someone posted elsewhere about pre-DF days. In earlier times it seemed okay to have intense discussion, to have different views; there was more of a sense of tolerance and an appreciation of uncertainty in many areas, even at Bethel. But as the GB got to taking themselves seriously and making policy decisions on everything ...
Maximus