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: ACLU NewsroomGroups Promise Lawsuit if Giles County School Board Orders Reposting of Ten Commandments
By ACLU
School board expected to vote on June 7 on whether to place Ten Commandments on school walls, along with other historical documents
Giles County, VA— The ACLU of Virginia and the Freedom From Religion Foundation today warned the Giles County School Board not to follow through with a proposal to mount displays featuring the Ten Commandments and several historical documents in public schools. The two religious rights groups say they intend to file a lawsuit challenging the displays if they are authorized by the school board.
'The Ten Commandments were clearly placed in Giles County public schools to promote religion, and that violates the First Amendment of the Constitution,' said ACLU of Virginia Executive Director Kent Willis. 'School board members can't now camouflage their religious purpose by hiding the Ten Commandments among other documents.'
According to recent news reports, the school board is voting on June 7 on whether to post in all schools displays that would include the Ten Commandments, the Bill of Rights, the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, the Declaration of Independence, the Virginia Declaration of Rights, the Mayflower Compact, the Magna Carta, Lady Justice, and the National Anthem.
For years, Giles County schools posted side-by-side copies of the Ten Commandments and the U.S. Constitution, but after complaints from the Freedom From Religion Foundation last fall, the school superintendentdered them taken down. The school board, however, in a meeting attended by 200 residents urging restoration of the display, voted to overturn the superintendent's decision. Only after the ACLU and the Freedom From Religion Foundation threatened litigation did the school board reverse itself andder the Ten Commandments taken down again.
In the letter emailed this morning, ACLU of Virginia Legal Director Rebecca Glenberg and Freedom From Religion Foundation Staff Attorney Patrick Elliott note that the Ten Commandments has sometimes been allowed in public buildings when it is part of a secular display. However, the courts have made it clear that when such displays have a religious purpose, they are unconstitutional. The courts have been especially sensitive to such displays in public schools, where government promotion of religion is most strictly prohibited. Today's letter can be found at http://acluva.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/20110601GilesCoSchoolBoardL....
A copy of an earlier letter sent to the Giles County School Board can be found online at http://acluva.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/ACLU-FFRF-letter-to-school-....
Full post as published by ACLU Newsroom on June 01, 2011 (boomark / email).
Virginia: Groups threaten suit if Giles County reposts Ten Commandments in schools
Augusta Free Press: The ACLU of Virginia and the Freedom From Religion Foundation today warned the Giles County School Board not to follow through with a proposal to mount displays featuring the Ten Commandments and several historical documents in public schools.
Virginia County's Schools Restore 10 Commandments Displays
In Giles County, Virginia, the Giles County School Board voted unanimously on Thursday to re-hang 4-foot tall copies of the Ten Commandments in the district's 5 schools and its technology center...
Va. school board votes to rehang Ten Commandments
PEARISBURG, Va. Heeding the complaints of hundreds of parents, a southwest Virginia school system is returning copies of the Ten Commandments to all of its public schools. The Giles County school board decided yesterday to rehang the commandments in the district?s five schools and technology center after the outpouring from parents...
VA: Ten Commandments displays taken down again from Giles Co. schools
News & Advance: "Giles County Schools has removed all displays of the Ten Commandments in the county's schools, and the school system's technology center again, according to Superintendent Terry Arbogast...
Giles County School Board Obeys Constitution
-Submitted by David Drumm (Nal), Guest Blogger The school board in Giles County, VA, has decided to remove the Ten Commandments posters in all local schools. The Virginia ACLU and the Freedom From Religion Foundation had plaintiffs and threatened lawsuits that the school board would have almost surely lost...
Va. school district removes Ten Commandments displays
RICHMOND, Va. ? A southwest Virginia school system has again removed all displays of the Ten Commandments, a month after reposting them despite concerns that doing so was unconstitutional...
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