Posted on 08/20/2003 1:10:06 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed
US Supreme Court refuses to block removal of Ten Ccommandments from Alabama courthouse.
If he got elected as the "Koran Judge" he would be able to do what he wants. However, the muslims belive in the same God and the same commandments.
Did you mean to use a double negative?
Nope. Chief Judge Moore was sued in his official capacity as Chief Judge of the Alabama Supreme Court, not as a private citizen. The state of Alabama is a real party of interest, because the state, not Judge Moore, will be paying the fines, if any fines are imposed.
He's going the wrong way about fighting for greater state powers.
There are people who are fed up with Moore's judgments, but they have to obey his rulings. He's either for the rule of law or for anarchy.
the Feds have every right to defend the Constitution. If they won't then the whole bunch of them need to go. And that is our job. The states have NO rights to make or interpret law in direct contravention of our rights. Period.
The thing that fascinates me is that recent history has demonstrated that we can hardly entrust the government with anything. Nevertheless, many people on here are more than willing to believe that if we let government establish religion, everything will undoubtedly turn out just fine.
Exactly. And Judge Thompson explained this quite clearly in his denial of the stay the other day.
For those who missed it:
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF ALABAMA, NORTHERN DIVISION CIVIL ACTION NO. 01-T-1268-N
STEPHEN R. GLASSROTH, Plaintiff,
v.
ROY S. MOORE, Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, Defendant.CIVIL ACTION NO. 01-T-1269-N
MELINDA MADDOX and BEVERLY HOWARD, Plaintiffs,
v.
ROY MOORE, in his official capacity, Defendant.ORDER
This litigation is again before the court, this time on a motion to stay, etc., filed on August 15, 2003, by defendant Roy S. Moore, Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court. The Chief Justice asks that the court stay its August 5 final judgment and injunction pending the outcome of a petition for writ of mandamus and prohibition he has filed in the United States Supreme Court. The stay motion will be denied for the following reasons:
(1) In his petition for writ of mandamus and prohibition, the Chief Justice attacks, for several reasons, the August 5 final judgment and injunction, which required that he remove his Ten Commandments monument from the rotunda of the Alabama Judicial Building. As a required predicate to the issuance of the writ, the Chief Justice argues to the United States Supreme Court that the relief sought "is not available in any other court." This is not true. The Chief Justice could have appealed, and still can appeal, the August 5 final judgment and injunction to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. The Chief Justice should not be able to circumvent, or avoid, the Eleventh Circuit and keep that appellate court out of the orderly appellate process.
In short, with his writ petition, the Chief Justice is seeking relief in the wrong court at this time.
(2) As jurisdictional support for his writ petition, the Chief Justice invokes 28 U.S.C.A. § 1651(a), which provides that, "The Supreme Court and all courts established by Act of Congress may issue all writs necessary and appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law." The Chief Justice argues that granting the writ will "aid [the Supreme] Court to conduct an orderly and timely review of [his] petition for writ of certiorari."
This argument is completely meritless. Aside from the fact, as stated above, that the Chief Justice can simply seek relief in the Eleventh Circuit from this court's August 5 final judgment and injunction, this court, not once but twice, essentially invited the Chief Justice to invoke the orderly and established process under the federal rules for a stay of any injunction pending a petition to the United Supreme Court for writ of certiorari--invitations which the Chief Justice declined.
Therefore, the fact that the court issued a final judgment and injunction on August 5, without allowing for a stay pending review by the United States Supreme Court, is the direct, willed result of the actions of the Chief Justice himself. As the court explained in its August 5 final judgment and injunction, on two separate occasions this court conducted conference calls with counsel for all parties to discuss how to proceed regarding an injunction for removal of the monument once the appellate mandate had issued pursuant to the decision of the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals upholding the removal the monument. During the first call, on July 28, before the appellate mandate had issued, the Chief Justice's counsel indicated that while they were aware of the proper procedure, under Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, for requesting a stay of the mandate pending a request for review by the United States Supreme Court (and thus a continuance of the stay this court had previously entered pending Eleventh Circuit review of the initial injunction requiring removal of the monument), they declined to do so. During the August 4 conference call, after the mandate had issued, the Chief Justice's counsel again declined to use this opportunity to ask that a stay be entered or continued pending application to the Supreme Court for review. Indeed, in the final judgment and injunction, the court stated that one of the reasons for not continuing the stay already in effect was "because the Chief Justice did not ask, either in the Eleventh Circuit or in this court, for a stay of the injunction pending application for a writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court."
To this day, the court does not know any litigation-related reason why the Chief Justice declined to seek a stay through the orderly and established process outlined in the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. It can therefore be reasonably argued that the Chief Justice himself, for seemingly "extra-judicial" reasons known only to him, intentionally created the scenario from which he now contends in his petition for writ of mandamus and prohibition he should be extricated--apparently because there is now an effort afoot to remove him from office and because other state officials have now made known that they will enforce the August 5 final judgment and injunction if he does not. The court will not be a party to any extra-judicial machinations of the Chief Justice.(1)
(3) In his writ petition, the Chief Justice complains that the court improperly discussed in its August 5 final judgment and injunction the relief it might impose should the Chief Justice disobey the August 5 final judgment and injunction. The court did this out of concern that the parties and the public in general needed to know that, if at all possible, this litigation would not devolve into some public clash between federal and state officials that could endanger public safety. That is, if the Chief Justice disobeyed the final judgment and injunction, there would be no opportunity for a "Stand in the Courthouse Door" and the public disruption that could attend it. Thus, the court concluded its relief discussion with the observation that the court "does not envision a scenario in which there would be an opportunity for any physical confrontation between federal and state officials or between federal officials and anyone else." Instead, the court emphasized that it would initially employ non-confrontational means: "If called upon, this court intends, at this time, to achieve compliance by first exhausting the traditional civil-contempt process of levying fines."
The court, therefore, made these observations in the interest of public safety and welfare, a concern which was warranted when made and remains warranted today--especially if, as is alleged in an attachment to the August 15 stay motion, evidence should reveal that the Chief Justice has now announced that he will not obey the August 5 final judgment and injunction.(2)
(4) In his writ petition, the Chief Justice complains that the court improperly served copies of the final judgment and injunction on various state officials who were not parties to the litigation. The Chief Justice argues that this act showed a disrespect for the sovereignty of the State of Alabama and its officials, in violation of the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. To the contrary, the court did this out of a profound respect for the State of Alabama and its law-abiding public officials. This respect is based on the belief that, should the Chief Justice disobey the final judgment and injunction, other responsible state officials will assure that the State of Alabama is a government of laws and not of men, as our Constitution requires and will follow the United States Supreme Court, as the Federal Constitution requires.
Under this scenario, regardless as to whether the Chief Justice obeys or disobeys the final judgment and injunction, there will be no need, in the true spirit of federalism, for further federal court interference in state affairs. Thus, it was quite appropriate and respectful that all responsible state officials be personally informed of the unfolding events in this litigation.
(5) Finally, for a district court to stay an injunction pending appellate review, the following factors must be considered: "(1) the applicant's likelihood of prevailing on the merits of the appeal; (2) whether the applicant will suffer irreparable damage absent a stay; (3) the harm that the other parties will suffer if a stay is granted; and (4) where the public interest lies." For the above reasons, none of these factors is satisfied.
The Chief Justice's motion to stay will therefore be denied. However, the court concludes with the observation that this denial in no way limits the Chief Justice's right to seek review by the United States Supreme Court, which he is still free to do. But, because he has consciously chosen not to ask the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals to keep the stay in place while he seeks such review, the law requires that the monument now be removed, with the understanding that it may be returned in the event the Supreme Court should agree with the Chief Justice.
Accordingly, it ORDERED that the motion to stay, etc., filed by defendant Roy S. Moore on August 15, 2003, is denied.
DONE, this 18th day of August, 2003.
MYRON H. THOMPSON
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGENOTES:
1. It is important to note that the stay motion that is now before the court asks for a stay pending resolution of the petition for writ of mandamus and prohibition; consistent with the position the Chief Justice took during the July 28 and August 4 conference calls, he has not asked for a stay pending any filing of a petition for writ of certiorari.2. In fact, it can be reasonably inferred from the Chief Justice's filings that he may actually want a direct confrontation between federal officials and himself personally.
The constitution would not work if had a fixed meaning based upon the words because words often have different meaning to different people under different circumstances. That's why we have Supreme Court. If SCOTUS rules against the popular will, then the people can amend the constitution to overule the SCOTUS; and if SCOTUS misinterprets congressional intent, then congress can pass remedial legislation to correct the error.
The Free Speech clause of the 1st Amendment is a good example. The words are straight forward and without exception, yet SCOTUS has drawn many exceptions over the years by going beyond the plain meaning of the words. If the SCOTUS is irrelevant as you suggest, then we really need only two branches of federal government. And if SCOTUS can't look beyond the precise words in the text, then it has no basis for the "fighting words" and national security" exceptions to the free speech clause.
Good obeservation but its not the monument that is really on trial here. Its what Judge Moore sees that the monument represents. In the SC and the currency and the opening of congess, the displays have no meaning to the participants and are therefore exempt from scrutiny.
In the present case, its not the monument nor the contents of it nor the placement of it. Its Moores beliefs that are the issue. He sees a religious connection and therefore its wrong. If he saw no connection, only art and history then it would be OK.
You will notice that the folks attacking Moore over this are angry about his convictions and the monument is merely a symbol for them.
And I agree--private citizens can exercise their free speech rights (with very few limitations), including standing in the middle of a courthouse with t-shirts endorsing whatever they happen to endorse or protest whatever they're protesting--as long as they don't mess with juries (and a Supreme Court building wouldn't have them), get too loud, get too numerous and block or distrupt offices and staff, things like that, courthouse security shouldn't mind at all.
Can you prove that? In any event, I'm not in this fight to promote Christianity per se but rather to support the right of the morals it (and at times Judaism) share with our way of life and our government. I simply do not see this as "establishing a state religion et al". Where are you on the Pledge and Prayer in school since those sort of fall under this same umbrella.
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