Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, October 05, 2006
Indiana Supreme Court Upholds Striking Clergy From Jury Panel
Nevada Clergy Endorse Measure To Liberalize Drug Laws
New Debate Over Same-Sex Marriage In Canada
Parent Attacks Harry Potter Books In Georgia Schools
Justice Department Investigating School's Holiday Excusal Policy
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
En Banc Review Sought In California Library Use Case
Kentucky Prohibition On Funeral Protests Struck Down
The provisions at issue in this case burden substantially more speech than is necessary to prevent interferences with a funeral or to protect funeral attendees from unwanted, obtrusive communications that are otherwise impractical to avoid. Section 5(1)(b) prohibits all congregating, picketing, patrolling, demonstrating or entering on property within 300 feet of a funeral whether such activities interfere with the funeral or not and whether such activities are authorized by funeral attendees or not. It prohibits such activity whether the persons involved in the activities are visible to funeral participants or not and whether they are making any sound that funeral participants can hear or not. Thus, in addition to prohibiting intrusive activities, Section 5(1)(b), prohibits activity that would not interfere with a funeral and prohibits communications that are neither necessarily unwanted nor so obtrusive that they cannot be avoided by the funeral attendees....
The 300-foot zone would encompass public sidewalks and streets and would restrict private property owners' speech on their own property. The zone is large enough that it would restrict communications intended for the general public on a matter completely unrelated to the funeral as well as messages targeted at funeral participants.
EEOC Sues Dentist Charging He Imposed Scientology On Employee
Court Says St. Louis U. Can Get Urban Renewal Funds Despite Its Religious Origins
Judge Mooney, concurring in the transfer of the case to the state's Supreme Court, wrote that he would not affirm the trial court's summary judgment. He believed that a trial was necessary to determine whether St. Louis University, despite its governing documents, is no longer in fact controlled by the Catholic creed.
Denver Pre-School Tuition Plan Opposed On Church-State Grounds
Preacher Sues Kentucky University For Access To Campus
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Wisconsin State Employee Charity Campaign Cannot Exclude Religious Charities
Yesterday's Milwaukee Journal Sentinel says that the state will not appeal the ruling. It also points out that to qualify for inclusion in the Combined Campaign, religious charities will still have to demonstrate that they do not discriminate in the delivery of services.
Turkey's Justice Minister and President Fear Islamism
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship Sues University of Wisconsin For Recognition
Student's Religious Speech Right Upheld, But No Relief Granted
Student Joel Curry, largely inspired by his parents' suggestions, created candy cane ornaments from pipe cleaner as his product. He attached a card to the ornaments giving them a religious interpretation. While Joel received an "A" for his performance (a grade that the court described as a generous one for his parents' efforts), the school principal told Joel that he could not sell his product with the religious message attached. The court decided that this limitation improperly restricted the student's rights of expression (though not his free exercise rights). In reaching this conclusion, the court wrote:
The lessons Classroom City was designed to teach presumably included economics, marketing, civics, and entrepreneurialism. Standing alone, the candy canes with a religious card attached met those ostensible goals.... In fact, a religious theme might be viewed as filling a market niche. Joel would not be the first to discover the commercial allure that religion has brought to capitalism. It appears that he learned that lesson well by ascribing a religious -- albeit unoriginal and inaccurate -- aura to an historically secular object to enhance its marketability.