Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
9th Circuit Hears Latest Appeal In Mt. Soledad Cross Case
Yesterday the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments in Jewish War Veterans v. City of San Diego. (Recording of full arguments.) The case is part of the 20-year long series of lawsuits challenging the Mt. Soledad Veterans Memorial in San Diego, California, and the large Cross that is part of the memorial. This latest chapter is an appeal from a federal district court decision that rejected an Establishment Clause challenge, holding that Congress' primary purpose in acquiring the memorial was to preserve the site as a veterans' memorial, not to advance or favor a particular religion. The court went on to hold that maintaining the site with its cross has primarily a patriotic and nationalistic effect, rather than a religious one. (See prior posting.) Reporting on the oral arguments, yesterday's San Diego Union Tribune said that lawyers faced particularly heavy questioning from Judge M. Margaret McKeown.