Liberty Counsel
NEWS RELEASE
Contact: PUBLIC RELATIONS
DEPARTMENT - 800-671-1776
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
April 12, 2007
Gideon
Bible Distribution in Public Schools
Argued Before Federal Appeals Court
St.
Louis, MO - This morning the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals will
hear oral argument involving Gideon Bible distribution in public schools.
In Doe v. South Iron R-1 School District, federal district Judge Catherine
Perry issued a preliminary injunction barring the school from allowing
any outside group to offer Bibles to willing students at any time
on school property, including noninstructional time. Liberty Counsel
represents the District in Annapolis, Missouri, and has appealed the
injunction, arguing the injunction is unconstitutional because it
requires the District to discriminate only against a particular religious
message - the Bible.
The
South Iron R-1 School District has had a long-standing open access
policy that allows many groups to present literature and information
to students at District schools. The many diverse groups include the
Army Corps of Engineers, Red Cross, Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Iron
County Health Department, Missouri Water Patrol, Missouri Highland
Healthcare, and Union Pacific Railroad. In 2006, the District passed
a written policy setting forth its long-standing open access policy.
This policy confirms the District's intent to create a limited
public forum during noninstructional time outside of the classroom.
The
ACLU filed suit, seeking to prohibit the Gideons from distributing
Bibles under the policy. Judge Perry issued a preliminary injunction
prohibiting the distribution of the Bible, which she described as
an "instrument of religion." Judge Perry also ruled the
open access policy unconstitutional under a novel (and unconstitutional)
theory that it must allow a private third party the opportunity to
veto the distribution request of the private applicant.
Erik
W. Stanley, Chief Counsel of Liberty Counsel, stated, "There
is no violation of the Establishment Clause when a school creates
a neutral policy and allows a wide variety of groups to give literature
to students. Singling out the Bible for censorship is patently unconstitutional."
Mathew
D. Staver, Founder of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty University
School of Law, commented: "The First Amendment provides that
community groups must receive equal treatment under an open access
policy. The Bible is not a radioactive device that harms children.
Religious viewpoints are clearly protected. The ACLU might not like
the fact that equal access means equal access for religious speech,
but equal treatment is required by the Constitution."
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