U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier ruled that the New Orleans City Council's 6-1 vote in December to take down monuments to Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, P.G.T Beauregard and a white militia group that led a rebellion against the state's integrated, Reconstruction-era government did not break the law or violate the plaintiffsâ constitutional rights.
Barbier added that his decision is not a comment on âthe wisdom, or lack thereof, of the actions taken by ... Mayor (Mitch Landrieu) or the City Council.â
The lawsuit Barbier ruled on was brought by the Monumental Task Force Committee, Louisiana Landmarks Society, Foundation for Historical Louisiana and Beauregard Camp No. 130.
City officials had said they would not take action to remove the statues until the court had a chance to review the plaintiffsâ claims. A city spokesman did not immediately respond to a question about how quickly officials intended to proceed with taking the monuments down following Barbierâs ruling.
'Death threats,' 'threatening calls' prompt firm tasked with removing Confederate monuments to quit
The plaintiffsâ attorney, Franklin Jones, also did not immediately respond to a question about whether his clients intended to appeal Barbierâs decision.
Tuesdayâs decision wasnât entirely unexpected.
At a hearing earlier this month, Jones argued that the risk of damaging the statues while taking them down was too great, and an expert had said moving such complex monuments was rife with unknowns. But Barbier didnât appear to be swayed by that argument, remarking that the expert cited by Jones worked in offshore rigging and had never relocated a statue.
Barbier also remembered how officials used a helicopter to remove and replace the Statue of Freedom atop the U.S. Capitol when that monument needed repairs.
Further, Barbier cast doubt on whether the preservationists behind the suit could prove they had a chance of winning at a full trial, which the plaintiffs needed to do to secure the injunction they wanted. The judge repeatedly asked the plaintiffsâ attorneys questions about their claims and never seemed satisfied with their answers, at one point saying, âI donât even understand your argument.â
That hearing was the same day New Orleans officials announced that the Baton Rouge company hired to remove the statues had received death threats and quit the project.
Five days later, a $200,000 Lamborghini belonging to the owner of that company was found burned to the ground in the firmâs parking lot.
We are subjects of the state.
How is this different than ISIS blowing up historic items?
Revisionist history sucks. At Camp Ben McCulloch we’ll make our own flags if we have to. This is year 120 for the reunion.
What happened to the historical monument preservation that they continually invoke when it suits their purpose?
The six city councilmen would rather spend their time on this, rather than do anything that would tangibly make anyones' life better in that dump of a city.
-PJ
shaking head