OneNewsNow.com - 'Legal Analysis' With Decalogue Okayed for Courtroom
August 21, 2008
by Jeff Johnson - OneNewsNow
The same federal court that ruled an Ohio county judge's display of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom unconstitutional six years ago has said the judge can display a legal analysis that includes God's moral law.
Richland County Court Judge James DeWeese was ordered in 2002 to remove a poster displaying the Ten Commandments from his courtroom wall. DeWeese complied, but four years later posted a new display called "Philosophies of Law in Conflict." (Click here to view image of the display)
"It contains a commentary on his view
about this conflict in our society between moral absolutism and moral relativism,"
explains Francis J. Manion, senior counsel with the American Center for Law &
Justice. "The one he symbolizes with the Ten Commandments; and the other he symbolizes
with what he calls 'Seven Humanist Precepts,' which he's taken from various sources such
as the infamous Humanist Manifesto."
Manion, who
describes the display as "an attempt to foster an intellectual and philosophical
debate," defended DeWeese against a new contempt charge filed by the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU).
"I think a first-year law student
-- having taken 'Civil Procedure' and understanding what 'contempt' is and what
injunctions are and what the scope of injunctions is -- would not have believed, I
hesitate to say it but, in good faith that this was a legitimate motion for contempt,"
says the attorney.
U.S. District Judge Kathleen O'Malley
apparently agreed. She dismissed the contempt charge against DeWeese, writing, "the
Court can find no principled basis upon which to find that, or even fully consider
whether, the new display is constitutionally impermissible." Manion believes
the complaint filed by the ACLU was nothing more than legal harassment of Judge
DeWeese.
Judge O'Malley was the district judge who, in
June 2002, declared DeWeese's Ten Commandments display unconstitutional and ordered that
it be removed immediately.