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From: Walter Watts (wlwatts@cox.net)
Date: Wed Aug 27 2003 - 16:17:48 MDT

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    Workers Remove Ten Commandments Monument

    Aug 27, 5:40 PM (ET)

    By KYLE WINGFIELD

    (AP) A crew moves the Ten Commandments monument from the rotunda of the
    Alabama Judicial Building in... Full Image

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - A 2 1/2-ton granite monument of the Ten
    Commandments that became a lightning rod in a legal storm over church
    and state was wheeled from the rotunda of the Alabama Supreme Court
    building Wednesday as protesters knelt, prayed and chanted, "Put it
    back!"

    Suspended Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, who installed the engraved
    set of tablets two years ago and risked his career to keep it there
    after a federal judge ordered it removed, said he would take his fight
    to the U.S. Supreme Court.

    "It is a sad day in our country when the moral foundation of our laws
    and the acknowledgment of God has to be hidden from public view to
    appease a federal judge," he said.

    To the dismay of scores of supporters who had held a weeklong vigil
    outside the front doors, the 5,280-pound monument was jacked up by a
    work crew and taken away to a back room with a heavy-duty hydraulic hand
    truck.

    Building officials did not immediately say where the monument would be
    stored or whether the public would ever be allowed to see it.

    U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson of Montgomery had ruled last year
    that the monument violates the Constitution's ban on government
    endorsement of a religious doctrine.

    "This is a tremendous victory for the rule of law and respect for
    religious diversity," said the Rev. Barry Lynn, executive director of
    Americans United for Separation of Church and State. "Perhaps Roy Moore
    will soon leave the bench and move into the pulpit, which he seems
    better suited for."

    As the monument left public view, a federal judge in Mobile dismissed a
    lawsuit that had been filed this week in a last-ditch effort to block
    its removal.

    The long-running dispute has galvanized evangelical Christians and
    conservatives in this Bible Belt state and around the country.

    (AP) Christian Defense Coalition Director Patrick Mahoney, blue shirt,
    talks with supporters on the... Full Image

    Asked about President Bush's view of the controversy, White House
    spokeswoman Claire Buchan said: "It is important that we respect our
    laws and our courts. In some instances the courts have ruled that the
    posting of Ten Commandments is OK. In other circumstances they have
    ruled that it's not OK. In either case, there is always opportunity for
    appeal of courts' decisions."

    Outside the Alabama courthouse, demonstrators lay face-down on the
    pavement, knelt in prayer on the steps, and recited the Pledge of
    Allegiance and the Lord's Prayer. Four men linked arms and chanted, "Put
    it back!"

    Hundreds took part in the vigil, and organizers said the protest would
    not end with the monument's removal.

    "They can move it out of view, but they can't move it out of our
    hearts," said Rick Moser, 47, of Woodstock, Ga.

    Protest organizer Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense
    Coalition, said it is critical for the supporters to remain after the
    monument's removal to "stand with Christ and against judicial tyranny."

    Moore was suspended by a judicial ethics panel for defying Thompson's
    order to move the monument. The federal judge had threatened to impose
    $5,000 daily fines on the state, and Moore's eight fellow justices on
    the Supreme Court overruled Moore and ordered the monument taken away.

    Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryor, a Republican, defended the
    court-ordered removal of the monument and is overseeing the prosecution
    of Moore on the ethics charge, which will be heard before the
    seven-member Court of the Judiciary. It has the power to discipline and
    remove judges.

    Moore contends the federal judge has no authority to tell Alabama's
    chief justice to remove the monument.

    Republican Gov. Bob Riley said in a statement that he hopes the
    monument's removal is "brief and temporary," with the U.S. Supreme Court
    ordering it moved back. He said he will file court papers supporting
    Moore.

    --
    Walter Watts
    Tulsa Network Solutions, Inc.
    "Reminding you to help control the human population. Have your sexual
    partner spayed or neutered."
    ---
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