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Family of soldier sues Westboro scum

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by markvid, Oct 27, 2007.

  1. three_bags_full

    three_bags_full Well-Known Member

    ... by Lexington Steele.
     
  2. farmerjerome

    farmerjerome Active Member

    Last year after the Amish school shootings there was a rumor that the Phelps family was going to show up and protest the funerals.

    I was in Western Penn. for a wedding then, and was fully prepared to slit all of their tires. They didn't, but I'm glad the families got a little peace.
     
  3. Double Down

    Double Down Well-Known Member

    Just thought some of you would be interested in this update:

    The family that sued won an $11 million judgement today against Phelps and Co.

    http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-westboro1031,0,7191706.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
     
  4. three_bags_full

    three_bags_full Well-Known Member

    Was a baseball bat and some old Vietnam vets part of the settlement?
     
  5. heyabbott

    heyabbott Well-Known Member

    "You must balance the defendants' expression of religious belief with another citizen's right to privacy," presiding judge Richard D. Bennett instructed jurors yesterday.

    I hope the judge's instruction is upheld. A balancing of rights seems fair.
     
  6. Pastor

    Pastor Active Member


    It is in my revision, but I only read from the Queen Elizabeth version thus the reference is towards cigarettes.
     
  7. markvid

    markvid Guest

    In the good news department...may this be the first of many.


    Father of slain Marine wins case against funeral protesters
    Pa. man awarded $2.9 million in compensatory damages
    By Matthew Dolan | Sun reporter
    3:56 PM EDT, October 31, 2007

    Albert Snyder of York, Pa., the father of a Westminster Marine who was killed in Iraq, today won his case in a Baltimore federal court against members of Topeka, Kan.-based Westboro Baptist Church who protested at his son's funeral last year.

    The jury of five women and four men awarded Snyder $2.9 million in compensatory damages. The amount of punitive damages to be awarded has not yet been decided. The jury deliberated for about two hours yesterday and much of today.

    Snyder was the first in the nation to attempt to hold members of Westboro Baptist Church legally liable for their shock protests at military funerals after the church protested the military's inclusion of gays at the funeral of Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder, a 2003 Westminster High School graduate who died March 3, 2006, in a vehicle accident in Anbar province.

    In June 2006, Snyder sued the tight-knit fundamentalist Christian church and three of its members individually. The father argued that Westboro's demonstrations exacerbated his pain and suffering in March 2006 while he mourned the death of his only son.

    Specifically, he charged that they violated his privacy, intentionally inflicted emotional harm and engaged in a conspiracy to carry out their activities. The jury decided in Snyder's favor on every count.

    The church and its members maintained that they did nothing wrong. They based their legal defense on the First Amendment, arguing that their protests were constitutionally protected. Their attorneys told jurors yesterday that Westboro members were expressing closely held religious beliefs about an immoral society, including the military, that has endorsed homosexuality.

    Jonathan Katz, the attorney for the church and one of its founders, said that members followed state law during their protest in Westminster because they stood on public property about 1,000 feet from the funeral.

    The church's controversial protests have prompted at least 22 states to enact or propose laws to limit the rights of protesters at funerals. Only months after Matthew Snyder's death, Maryland passed a law prohibiting people from picketing within 100 feet of a funeral, memorial, burial or procession.

    matthew.dolan@baltsun.com

    Previously published information from Matthew Dolan was included in this article.
     
  8. StaggerLee

    StaggerLee Well-Known Member

    As someone who attended the funeral of his best friend Saturday, who died while serving our country in Iraq, I'm happy to see the judicial system work for Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder's family.

    People like the members of this Westboro clan (refuse to call them a church or congregation) should be the ones we're sacrificing overseas.
     
  9. slappy4428

    slappy4428 Active Member

    Would be nice, at the next protest they try, to see the father claim title to their vehicles and leave them high and dry.
    Am envisioning the Black Widows in Every Which Way but Loose...
     
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