Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, July 15, 2006
Routine Judicial Mix-Up Gets Attention Because Of Religious Content
Last month in Honolulu, Hawaii defendant Junior Stowers was acquitted on a misdemeanor charge of abusing his 15 year old son after the boy said it was really his brother who hit him. Just before the jury returned, Circuit Judge Patrick Border issued a standard warning to both lawyers in the case that he did not want any outbursts of emotion in the court room when the verdict was announced. However, Stowers' public defender lawyer did not have time to tell Stowers of the order, and when the jury announced his acquittal, Stowers raised his hands and exclaimed, "Thank you, Jesus!" The judge cited Stowers for contempt, and he was held for six hours until at a hearing the judge realized that Stowers did not know of his order, and released him. The AP story on this rather routine mix up has been carried in media around the world because of the religious expression involved in Stowers' emotional outburst.