Posted on 06/17/2006 12:19:17 PM PDT by DeweyCA
If the ACLU happens to sue your small hometown and then demands $1 million dollars for their lawyers, would you call them generous and charitable? Strangely enough, that's exactly what theyve done to the small town of Dover, Pennsylvania. Following the ACLU and Americans United for Separation of Church and State's (AUSCS) federal trial court victory in Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School Board (M.D.Penn. 2005), the ACLU recently announced it would "generously" demand only $1 million in costs and attorneys fees. Why $1 million you may ask? According to the ACLUs Eric Rothschild, We think its important that the public record will reflect how much it costs to stop an unconstitutional action. But a closer look at the public record shows a highly questionable path was taken to stop the Dover Area School Districts evolution policy that was at the heart of the controversy.
In October 2004 the Dover Area School Board made national headlines for its controversial evolution policy. It stated: Students will be made aware of gaps/problems in Darwins Theory and of other theories of evolution including, but not limited to, intelligent design. Note: Origins of the life will not be taught. The policy also required school administrators to read to students a statement mentioning problems with Darwin's theory and refers students to school library textbooks discussing the theory of intelligent design. Students were permitted to leave the room when the statement was read. Ironically, the policy itself wasnt favored by such leading proponents of intelligent design as the Discovery Institute, which opposes mandating the topic in public schools and repeatedly urged the Dover board to repeal its policy well before any lawsuit was filed. (For a detailed treatment of the Dover policy and the ensuing trial see the newly released Traipsing into Evolution.)
A group of parents from the community sued the school district, which led to a trial last fall. The trial proceeded poorly for the Dover Board, as two of its members who testified appeared to give contradictory (and possibly false) testimony on facts leading up to the evolution policy's adoption. The trial concluded in October, with a decision not expected for a couple months.
In the meantime, the Dover Area School District held November elections for the School Board. A slate of candidates formed under the name Dover C.A.R.E.S., to challenge incumbent members by campaigning on an anti-intelligent design policy platform. The Dover C.A.R.E.S. coalition campaigned vehemently against the board's flawed evolution policy, and attacked the theory of intelligent design along the same lines as the ACLU and AUSCS. Dover C.A.R.E.S. decried the litigation costs that the board risked, insisting that, by displacing the incumbents, they would heal the divided community.
In light of their opposition to the Dover Boards evolution policy, the election season brought charges that Dover C.A.R.E.S. was in league with the ACLU and AUSCS. The incumbent Dover Board members sent letters to residents arguing that the Dover C.A.R.E.S. candidates support the ACLU. One of the Dover C.A.R.E.S candidates, Phil Herman, responded, "Im very angry. Were not involved with the ACLU. I would like to see [the incumbents] bring out proof that we are."
The Dover C.A.R.E.S. candidates defeated the incumbents who were up for election. The new Board has an 8-1 majority against the old board's evolution policy.
The election of Dover C.A.R.E.S. endangered the plans of the ACLU and AUSCS. Both groups used the calamitous situation in the Dover Area School District to launch a comprehensive attack against scientists, philosophers, academics, and institutions throughout the nation that advocate the emerging scientific theory of intelligent design. They hoped for an authoritative court decision banning discussion of intelligent design in public schools and government, perhaps via a U.S. Supreme Court decision to ban the theory of intelligent design by subsuming it under creationism and its decision of Edwards v. Aguillard (1987).
Dover was never the primary target of the lawsuit, but rather served as a springboard for striking a blow nationwide against the theory of intelligent design. But the election of a new board that opposed its predecessors evolution policy threatened the hopes of the national groups. Even if federal trial judge John E. Jones III declared the old boards evolution policy unconstitutional, the new board could not be counted on to challenge any decision on appeal to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, let alone the Supreme Court. Furthermore, if the new board were to rescind the old board's evolution policy prior to any ruling by Judge Jones, the case might be settled through a consent decree, which would lack the authoritativeness of a mere federal district court decision. It would also diminish or possibly eliminate any chance of the ACLU or AUSCS's recovery of legal costs and fees from the Dover School District.
One might assume the new board's first item of business would be to rescind the old board's evolution policy. Not so. During their first meeting on December 5th, former Dover Board member David Napierski proposed a resolution to rescind the old boards evolution policy (prior to any court ruling). Acting as a private citizen, Napierski procured the opinion of an attorney, who said that a vote to rescind the evolution policy could stave off a courtroom defeat and significantly reduce or eliminate legal costs and fees. Yet the new board rejected Napierskis proposal to rescind the old policy.
What's more, one of the new board members, Bryan Rehm, was both a Dover C.A.R.E.S. candidate and a plaintiff represented by the ACLU and AUSCS in Kitzmiller.
Why would the new board keep in place the evolution policy it once so ardently opposed? The School Districts suit brought national attention and ridicule to the community, and the testimony of the former board members exacerbated the situation. A likely forthcoming decision by Judge Jones would overrule both the board and the theory of intelligent design. By rescinding the old board's evolution policy prior to a court ruling, the new board might have curtailed legal costs and fees incurred by a victorious ACLU and AUSCS. But the new board accepted a likely stinging defeat in court, with painful legal bills attached.
It is now three months following the Dover Area School Districts courtroom defeat and the ACLU, AUSCS, and the new board members have some tough questions to answer. The groups ostensibly charitable demands for $1 million in costs and attorneys fees (rather than the original $2 million) needs to be explained in greater detail than has henceforth been granted. Dover Board member Rehm hasnt returned phone calls or answered e-mails.
With a $1 million reimbursement from the Dover School District, and their ongoing public relations campaign to pose as generous compromisers in this struggle, the ACLU and AUSCS are playing up their achievement to the broader American public, over three quarters of which want intelligent design taught alongside Darwinism in schools. In the words of ACLUs Eric Rothschild following their victory in Dover: "Are we a little bit famous now? Yes, and its amazing."
Editor's note: Correction - The Dover Board considered rescinding the evolution policy at the December 5th meeting; Board member Bryan Rehm did not participate in the consideration.
Joe Manzari is a research assistant with the American Enterprise Institute. Seth Cooper is an attorney and former law & policy analyst with the Discovery Institute.
I doubt that the new board members were involved in a conspiracy to help the ACLU claim large sums of attorney fees. That seems outlandish to me. But it is scandalous that so much public money is drained, just because of some stupid mistake the previous Dover board made.
Two Jobs make private school possible in my home.
Ping...It seems to me the new board did not rescind the ID policy of the old board specifically because they wanted to have a court decision that was obviously going to be against the policy. If there was no decision, a future board could bring it back. But now it seems like the IDer's are coming up with conspiracy theories that it was all about getting $$ to the ACLU via legals fees if there was a court decision instad of an out of court settlement.
Ping...It seems to me the new board did not rescind the ID policy of the old board specifically because they wanted to have a court decision that was obviously going to be against the policy. If there was no decision, a future board could bring it back. But now it seems like the IDer's are coming up with conspiracy theories that it was all about getting $$ to the ACLU via legals fees if there was a court decision instad of an out of court settlement.
It wasn't a mistake, it was a deliberate action.
Ping Ping
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You remember correctly. I'll see if I can find an old thread on this issue, but it's clear that the important thing was to get an injunction against the unconstitutional policy. A mere withdrawal of the policy at that point would have accomplished nothing, and the legal fees would still have been awarded. There was no way to stop that. This is typical Discovery Institute spin.
FYI.
The ACLU is going to be paid 'in full' one of these days....
Note that the Thomas More Institute (or whatever its name is) shopped around the idea of instituting an "intelligent design" curriculum to many school boards. Dover is the one that agreed to test things for Thomas Moore. Tommy and Dover went into the situation looking for a trial; they got one. Unfortunately, the Dover witnesses were less than truthful (among other failings); one did adumbrate the Kennedy defense (lying because of drug addiction), but that didn't work in this case. Tommy and Dover lost.
School districts should be wary of law firms shopping curriculia to them.
It also came out at the trial that the school board's own attorney advised against their policy of pushing ID into the science classes, because it was likely to result in litigation. The school board was so crazed that they ignored their own lawyer's advice. But the Discovery Institute's post-trial spin doesn't mention uncomfortable details like that. To them, it's all an ACLU plot.
Some plot, considering that it was conceived and carried out by the Discovery Institute and that Thomas Moore law firm, with the eager cooperation of an idiotic school board. So it's all the ACLU's fault. This is one of the few times in living memory that the ACLU has been on the correct side of an issue. (I think they also filed a brief on behalf of Rush in his recent troubles.)
Very neat, and obvious now that's it's been pointed out. Thank you.
Advocating the use of the First Amendment to censor schools is the stupidest idea of the science establishment since the Inquisition.
It wasn't crazed conservatives who used activist judges to run prayer and religious ideas out of public schools, it was far left liberals who think like the devious Barry Lynn and the ACLU.
I wouldn't be too eager to accept the activist revisons of the Constitution that the left began to enact during and after the 1940s.
They ignored nearly 200 years of American legal history in doing so.
Of course, they did their judicial activist magic with impunity for 30 years using the likes of Brennan, Blackmun and Earl Warren.
Now that their logic has been proven to be faulty and disagrees with legal history and intent, the left has admitted that they ignore intent.
So now, in order to justify their obvious disagreement with historical legal intent, they have begun to openly claim that the Constitution is only an ACLU approved, living, breathing, judge-legislated document that can be ignored and revised according to the whims of a liberal judge. (and their activist revisionist rulings remain.)
The ACLU - America's Gestapo
" the stupidest idea of the science establishment since the Inquisition."
The Inquisition was an idea of the science establishment?
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