Posted on 05/25/2006 2:59:09 PM PDT by dukeman
ADF filed friend-of-the-court brief in defense of textbook stickers which accurately stated that evolution is a theory
ATLANTA The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit today vacated a lower court decision that declared Cobb County science textbook stickers which stated evolution is a theory, not a fact unconstitutional. The court was critical of the district court for issuing its ruling against the stickers despite holes in the evidentiary record in the case and remanded the case back to the district court for new proceedings.
No school should be in trouble for simply stating the facts. Thats what schools are supposed to do. Though we wish the appeals court would have ruled on the constitutional merits of the case without sending it back to the district court, we are pleased that the district courts ruling against the school district has been vacated, said Alliance Defense Fund Senior Legal Counsel Joel Oster.
In its ruling today, the 11th Circuit wrote, The problems presented by a record containing significant evidentiary gaps are compounded because at least some key findings of the district court are not supported by the evidence that is contained in the record. The full text of the courts ruling in the case Selman v. Cobb County School District can be read at www.telladf.org/UserDocs/CobbCountyDecision.pdf.
The lower court judge agreed that the stickers were not applied to the textbooks for a religious purpose and were devoid of religious content. Nonetheless, he deemed the stickers a violation of the so-called separation of church and state for the sole reason that many people were aware that Christians supported the stickers.
According to the friend-of-the-court brief ADF attorneys filed in the case, The District Courts analysis will lead to absurd results . The Establishment Clause was never meant to prohibit the passage of a secular law, for a secular purpose, simply because Christians actively lobbied for the law (www.telladf.org/news/story.aspx?cid=3404).
The sticker which had been applied to each textbook read, This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.
ADF is a legal alliance defending the right to hear and speak the Truth through strategy, training, funding, and litigation.
Between evolution and the pseudo-science of environmentalism, there are many conservatives that do despise science.
As someone who grew up in the Sputnik era, I'm pretty disappointed in otherwise rational people. Merely because science can be abused for political purposes (environmentalism) doesn't make science itself invalid.
My computer came with a warning sticker. It read: "Circuit theory is only a theory, not a fact. Controversies exist in our understanding of electrodynamic forces."
Whether we should reverse or affirm the judgment depends on the evidence that was before the district court, and we cannot tell from the record what that evidence was. Everyone agrees that some evidence presented to the district court has been omitted from the record on appeal, but the attorneys have not been able to identify what was omitted. The problems presented by a record containing significant evidentiary gaps are compounded because at least some key findings of the district court are not supported by the evidence that is contained in the record. We have concluded that the unfilled gaps in the record, coupled with the problematic nature of some of the district courts factfindings, prevent proper appellate review of the merits of the important constitutional issues raised in this case. For reasons we will explain, we have decided the best thing to do is remand the case to the district court in order for it to conduct new evidentiary proceedings and enter a new set of findings based on evidence in a record that we will be able to review.The opinion goes on at great length about how the court's opinion isn't supported by the record. This shows up on page 30:
As plaintiffs counsel on appeal has acknowledged: Perhaps because the 2300-signature Rogers Petition is missing from the record, both parties have confused it with the September Petition. He also made this remark: The trial transcript is replete with testimony about documents where the absence of identification by exhibit number and other foundational information make it difficult to ascertain with certainty from the appellate record what is being discussed. That is, if anything, an understatement.This (page 31) is interesting:We turn now to what we should do about factfindings unsupported by evidence in the record and rampant confusion about what evidence was before the district court.
We have said that the burden is on the appellant to ensure the record on appeal is complete, and where a failure to discharge that burden prevents us from reviewing the district courts decision we ordinarily will affirm the judgment. ... [skipping some] ... The rationale of these decisions, we suppose, is that where it is the appellants fault that an appellate court cannot properly carry out its review the appellant is the one who should suffer the consequences, and inflicting them encourages proper preparation and presentation of the record on appeal.Then (page 34) the court says:The absence-equals-affirmance rule that applies in the usual situation does not apply here because the cumulative effect of six considerations convinces us this is not the usual situation. First, this is not a case in which the appellants had the evidence, or had access to it, at the time the appeal was taken but chose not to include it in the record on appeal. This appears to be less a case of unsupplied evidence than one of missing evidence. Second, we cannot say it was the appellants fault that the evidence is missing from the record. In the circumstances that brought us to this point, there is more than enough blame to go around. Third, the appellants, like the appellees, have diligently attempted in good faith to supply us with the evidence once we brought the problem to their attention. Diligently, but without success.
Fourth, this is not a case in which without the missing evidence we have no reason to believe there is any error in the district courts findings. We cannot conduct a meaningful review of whether the district courts fact findings are supported by the evidence before it without knowing what that evidence was. Without the missing evidence we cannot tell the extent of any errors in the findings or the effect they had on the courts decision.
Fifth, both parties challenge decisions of the district court. The defendants challenge the conclusion of the district court that the sticker was an endorsement of religion, and the plaintiffs challenge the finding that the school board acted with a secular purpose. A complete and accurate record is essential to a full consideration of the arguments of both parties.
Finally, the issues presented by this case are ones of substantial public importance and need to be resolved on their merits based on the facts instead of based upon mutual mishaps, mistakes, and misunderstandings about the evidence. We do not mean to imply that anything less than all of these factors would cause us to remand for further evidentiary proceedings. Because all of the factors are present in this case, however, we think that course of action is the appropriate thing to do.
In remanding for additional evidentiary inquiry and new findings, we leave it to the district court whether to start with an entirely clean slate and a completely new trial or to supplement, clarify, and flesh out the evidence that it has heard in the four days of bench trial already conducted. The procedural details of the proceedings on remand are within the discretion of that court. Whatever the court decides to do, however, it should take care to ensure that any and all evidence on which it bases any findings is part of the record before it. The parties should ensure that the evidence put before the district court is included in the record on appeal.On page 35, running all the way to page 42, the court lists eighteen items as guidance to the trial judge as to what he should be looking for. It's interesting, but too long to copy here. Finally, on the last two pages (42 and 43, the court says:
In vacating the district courts judgment and remanding the case for additional proceedings, we want to make it clear that we do not intend to make any implicit rulings on any of the legal issues that arise from the facts once they are found on remand. We intend no holding on any of the legal premises that may have shaped the district courts conclusions on the three Lemon prongs. Mindful that in this area factual context is everything, we simply choose not to attempt to decide this case based on a less than a complete record on appeal or fewer than all the facts.In other words, no decision at all. No celebrations by either side.
What the court found was that the Pandas and People "textbook" had had a search-and-replace done on it between the first (before the Edwards descision) and current editions (after).
Search for "creationisn" replace with "intelligent design".
Certainly not the young earth creationists! The yec's lie. Lie about lying. And, post links to yec websites that quote more lies for the other yec liars to go around lying about.
As usual, PH, you read the actual decision, and try to make out what it is saying and bring to us lazybones(myself included), some of the more important passages from the actual decision....Am I right in thinking, that what has been said, is that there is more need for greater clarification of the evidence, or an addition of more needed evidence...and whether this can be done correctly, or should the whole thing be started over again, right from the beginning?
You are correct. In their elegant way, the appellate court ripped into the trial judge and the attorneys on both sides for ending up with a total mess.
The appellate court can't tell if the situation can be corrected (they point out that both sides tried a couple of times, without success, to supplement the record), or if the case needs to be tried all over again. Truly a mess. Everyone's to blame, apparently. Most embarrassing for all involved. Not a great moment for the legal profession.
Thanks for your clear headed assessment of this situation...it does seem like no one won this...cheerleaders from both sides, are cheering for what appears to be something that is not yet decided...
Well, with no decision at all, the sticker is still an undecided issue, so Cobb County can say they didn't lose. Of course, they didn't exactly win, but it's correct to say that nobody beat them.
They could decide to go ahead and put their stickers back on the books. Let's see if they go that route. If so, and if the plaintiffs still have a beef, I suspect that they'll pick a new law firm to handle the matter. Alas, the ACLU will be volunteering their services, which muddles things.
See this site: Gravity is just a theory. A neat spoof on ID.
http://www.re-discovery.org/gravity_1.html
Well, this will be an interesting case to follow....we will just have to wait and see what further steps will or wont be taken...
It's risky to make predictions, but I think that there could be a textbook sticker that would pass Constitutional review. It would be silly, but it could probably be done. Ken Miller's biology text has an introductory chapter on the nature of science, and what it means to have a theory, so it shouldn't be necessary for a book like his. But in Cobb County, they'd probably want to sticker it anyway.
YEC's do support telling the truth.
For what it's worth, YEC doesn't mean anything at (or beyond) the speed of light.
Sorry, but you are wrong here. Gravitational theory is still a theory no matter how much evidence is accumulated.
A theory in science is the end point.
No, not the commonly held definition of "theory".
We are talking biology here, not metaphysics...
Hmmm. well, blow me down!
I am not an astronomer, but know clearly that it's not called the "Theories of Celestial Mechanics..."
I have read just a little bit about Ken Miller...I would actually like to get a hold of his biology textbook, the third one, the Dragonfly one, and read it for myself...
I also believe that many points of agreement are possible, and points of agreeing to disagree are possible. In putting this in the court system, the judiciary assumes the role of arbitrator of truth in science, which is, IMHO, not their place.
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