Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, September 18, 2009
School Principal, Athletic Director Acquitted of Contempt In Prayer Case
Late yesterday afternoon, a Florida federal district court judge acquitted a Santa Rosa County (FL) high school principal and the school's athletic director of criminal contempt charges growing out of their failure to follow the terms of a temporary injunction against faculty-led school prayer. In January, nine days after U.S. District Judge Casey Rodgers issued the injunction, principal Frank Lay asked Pace High School athletic director Robert Freeman to lead a prayer at the beginning of a school luncheon at which students were present. According to yesterday's Pensacola News-Journal: "[Judge] Rodgers said the prayer at a field house dedication during the school day that was held on church property was spontaneous, and there was seemingly no intent to violate the order." AP reports that Judge Rodgers decision "was greeted with a roar of approval followed by rounds of religious hymns from the hundreds of protesters who had stood outside the Pensacola Federal Court House for the daylong trial." The contempt charges against the two officials of the rural Florida Panhandle school had become the center of national attention, in part through press releases from Liberty Counsel that was representing Lay and Freeman. (See prior posting.)