Posted on 01/05/2005 9:10:36 PM PST by FreeperinRATcage
Homosexual attorneys from the U.S. Justice Department Civil Rights Division not only attended a large homosexual event in Philadelphia last year, but they advised police on the scene who arrested 11 Christian protesters, says a source within the agency.
According to the Justice Department employee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, a number of agency attorneys from Washington, D.C., attended the October "OutFest" event, and, he says, they therefore are not likely to take up the cause of the five criminally charged Christians who believe Philadelphia officials violated their civil rights.
As WorldNetDaily reported, on Oct. 10, the group was "preaching God's Word" to a crowd of people attending the Philadelphia event and displaying banners with biblical messages.
After a confrontation with a group called the Pink Angels, described by protesters as "a militant mob of homosexuals," the 11 Christians were arrested and spent a night in jail.
Eight charges were filed: criminal conspiracy, possession of instruments of crime, reckless endangerment of another person, ethnic intimidation, riot, failure to disperse, disorderly conduct and obstructing highways.
None of the Pink Angels was cited or arrested.
After a preliminary hearing in December, Judge William Austin Meehan ordered four of the Christians to stand trial on three felony and five misdemeanor charges. If convicted, they could get a maximum of 47 years in prison. One female teenage protester faces charges in the juvenile justice system.
"Some of the lawyers in [the Civil Rights Division] participated in the gay-rights march," the source told WND, referring to the OutFest event. "They participate in those kinds of marches."
Because of that participation, the source thought there would be a "conflict" with the homosexual attorneys, saying they would not be too eager to help the Christians who protested at OutFest.
The Justice source said he estimated between 10 and 11 percent of the attorneys in the Civil Rights Division are homosexual.
He said he believes the protesters were charged with ethnic intimidation "at the recommendation of some of our attorneys who were at the march."
Continued the Justice employee: "They advised the police as witnesses, not as legal counsel, but as witnesses who may have observed what happened."
Supporters of the defendants, known as "the Philadelphia 5," have encouraged concerned Americans to contact the Department of Justice to urge officials there to take action against the city of Philadelphia for allegedly violating the civil rights of the protesters.
A notice on the Repent America website states, "Encourage the U.S. Department of Justice to get involved by contacting Chief Albert Moskowitz in the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division at 202-514-4540, and Chief Shanetta Brown-Cutlar in Special Litigation at 202-514-6255."
A general e-mail address is listed on the department's website for contacting the agency.
The Justice Department source said some attorneys there have tried to get more homosexual lawyers into the agency.
"The attorneys who are gay here are trying to encourage more diversity," he said. "But there's no quote or anything."
Brian Fahling, senior trial attorney for the American Family Association's Center for Law & Policy, is representing the Christian defendants. He was not surprised that Department of Justice attorneys may have attended OutFest.
"Actually, that wouldn't surprise me because they're not all political appointments," he told WND. "There would be some who would be career civil servants from the Clinton administration."
Fahling said it was "always a possibility" that the sexual orientation of Justice attorneys could bias them against the Philadelphia 5. Even so, the attorney believes if enough public pressure is put on the Department of Justice, officials there will take action against the city of Philadelphia.
"With a sufficient amount of pressure, something will happen," he said. "We're going to continue to press in that direction."
Fahling said it was "mind-numbing" that his clients potentially could be facing 47 years in jail.
"It's clear that the facts don't matter in Philadelphia," he said, "so there's going to have to be outside intervention" from the Justice Department.
Fahling said that at the preliminary hearing in December, the Philadelphia city prosecutor in the case, Charles Ehrlich, attacked the defendants as "hateful" and referred to preaching the Bible as "fighting words," a characterization, the law group says, with which Judge Meehan agreed.
Charges were dropped against six of the 11 Christians, apparently because they were not seen quoting Scripture on the videotape.
The ethnic intimidation charge stems from Pennsylvania's "hate crimes" law to which the newest "victim" category of "sexual orientation" was recently added.
This kind of gives new meaning to Philadelphia being called the "City of 'brotherly' love", doesn't it?
IOW, Christians better not count on help in protecting their rights from anyone in the U.S. Justice Department Civil Rights Division.
I wonder if those homosexuals government attorneys flashed their prosecutor badges to force the police to act. (an ethics violation that could loose their license)
Will these homosexual attorneys be identified?
Which means the figure can be doubled.
Can you say "gay conspiracy"??
The civil rights divisions are bastions of the PC minded democrat oriented attorneys. The sad fact is that most of them are Judge wanabes. Given the recent political realities of judicial nominations, this is the future source of most of the judicial nominiees that we will not hear about.
a homosexual clique zone? (don't they say the "don't ask don't tell policy has had the same result? Was not the AbuGrab prison scandal a result of such a fetish clique?)
Yep. (Ssshhh, don't tell the MSM)
..more prevalent than some think....nasty, nasty, people.
Which the left assured us here in PA that this use of the law would never happen and those who were saying it would were just homo haters.
As complaining witnesses, those DoJ attorneys would have personal liability in a civil rights lawsuit against them, which should be filed right away.
By Jim Brown and Jody Brown
January 5, 2005
(AgapePress) - A Christian attorney is expressing deep concern over the latest development in a case involving a group of Christians who were arrested for preaching the gospel at a homosexual pride event in Philadelphia.
Four Christians have been bound over for trial and face up to 47 years each in prison after preaching to a crowd of homosexuals at the pro-homosexual "Outfest" event in early October. Michael Marcavage, Mark Diener, Dennis Green, and James Cruse were each expected to enter a plea of "not guilty" on Wednesday (January 5) for the felony and misdemeanor charges filed against them by the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office. A female minor who also was arrested at the time faces charges in the juvenile justice system.
A strange twist has developed in the case since it was discussed Monday night on the Fox News program The O'Reilly Factor. WorldNetDaily is reporting that homosexual attorneys from the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division not only attended the October event, but also advised the Philadelphia police on the scene when 11 Christian protesters were arrested. According to that report, those DOJ attorneys may have recommended to police that the Christians be charged with "ethnic intimidation" under Pennsylvania's new "hate crimes" law.
WorldNetDaily identifies its source as a Justice Department employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity. That employee says because of those attorneys' involvement at "Outfest," it is unlikely the DOJ will take up the cause of those now facing criminal charges. A legal representative for "The Philadelphia Four" stated on Bill O'Reilly's show that plans included asking the DOJ to investigate the case.
Brian Fahling, the Christian attorney who appeared on The O'Reilly Factor, says the report of DOJ attorneys' involvement on the scene should trouble all who are following the case, which he describes as "of historic dimension."
"This case is historic for all the wrong reasons," Fahling says, "and now it turns out that Department of Justice attorneys attended 'Outfest' and may have advised the city on what charges to bring. I am stunned."
Brian Fahling |
The attorney is asking the DOJ to open a criminal probe into the case, but says he may rethink that strategy in light of the apparent collusion between government attorneys and the Philadelphia police. "This is not an erosion of our rights under the Constitution," he adds. "It is an earthquake that has swallowed them whole."
The WorldNetDaily source said he estimated that between 10 and 11 percent of the attorneys in the DOJ's Civil Rights Division are homosexual, and that "the attorneys who are gay here are trying to encourage more diversity" by getting more homosexual lawyers into the agency. Fahling told WND it is "always a possibility" that the sexual orientation of government attorneys could bias them against his clients -- but that perhaps public pressure could bring about an investigation.
"I suppose the only way to overcome that [possible bias] is to get such a public outcry on such a scale that it cannot be ignored by those higher up in the Department," the attorney says. "[I wouldn't expect] the political appointments in DOJ to be homosexual sympathizers; it's the lifers in the DOJ who may have come in [during] the Clinton administration, for instance, that would present the problem, if in fact the reports are true."
Only in Philly?
One might wonder how it could come to pass that a group of Christians could be arrested and face prison time simply for preaching the gospel of Christ in public. According to one family advocate in Philadelphia, the City of Brotherly Love offers the perfect environment for such an occurrence.
William Devlin is founder of the Urban Family Council of Philadelphia. In an interview with the Chalcedon Report, Devlin lays blame at the feet of local church leaders and politicos.
"The real story here is the silence of the city's clergy," Devlin says. "Over the last ten years, I've been to pastor after pastor in this city, trying to get them to put pressure on the elected officials who've been pushing the homosexual agenda. They're all afraid to speak up. There is a collective spirit of fear hanging over this city. Right now, the gays own Philadelphia."
According to Devlin, the city fathers are akin to the proverbial frog in the kettle. "They've sat there in silence for all this time while the gays kept turning up the water temperature," he says. "Now it's come to a boil, and they're still in the pot."
Local political leaders are also at fault, says Devlin. One of the city leaders he is particularly critical of is Nelson Diaz, the city solicitor, who -- according to Devlin -- says he is a born-again Christian. Diaz, he says, is "busy now suing the Boy Scouts to force them to accept atheists and homosexuals as Scout leaders, busy pushing for gay marriage and more hate speech laws."
Chalcedon Report notes that Diaz chaired the Billy Graham Crusade in Philadelphia in 1991-92. The city solicitor, says Devlin, is one among many political leaders in the city who present themselves as born-again, evangelical Christians while promoting "gay rights" at the expense of Christianity.
Ping
Yea. Is promoting "diversity" just code for subverting the DOJ?
And they called Ashcroft a nazi?
Yep. Just like "hate crimes" legislation promotes subverting justice.
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