Fourth Circuit Upholds Fredericksburg Prayer Policy (7/23/2008)
Former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor says Fredericksburg's
requirement that meeting-opening prayers be nonsectarian is constitutional
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: acluva@acluva.org Richmond, VA -- A three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
today upheld Fredericksburg City Council's policy requiring that formal prayers
used to open its meetings be nonsectarian. The opinion was written by
former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who was a guest-member of the
panel when it heard oral arguments in March.
"This is a victory for religious freedom," said ACLU of Virginia Executive
Director Kent Willis. "The Supreme Court has long held that government officials
are allowed to open legislative gatherings with a prayer, but that such prayers
must in no way indicate a preference for one religion over others."
"Individuals are free to express their own religious preferences,
but religious equality cannot exist when the government is allowed to use its
considerable power to promote one particular faith," added Willis. "Today's
ruling reaffirms that fundamental principle."
The origins of the Fredericksburg case go back several years when a
Fredericksburg resident complained to the ACLU of Virginia that Rev. Hashmel
Turner was opening Council meetings with a Christian prayer. After the ACLU
intervened, Turner twice stopped participating in the prayer ceremony, but then
asked fellow members of Council to adopt a policy permitting sectarian prayers.
Council instead followed the advice of the ACLU and voted to abide by legal
precedents by adopting a policy requiring that formal prayers at its meetings be
nonsectarian.
Rev. Turner mounted a legal challenge to the policy in 2006. Later that year,
U.S. District Court Judge James Spencer ruled against Turner, who then appealed
to the Fourth Circuit.
"The ACLU has made it clear to Rev. Turner that he has a right to express his
religious beliefs in private and in public, including during City Council
deliberations," said Willis. "But in those few moments when he offers an
official prayer as the voice of the government, he must not abuse the privilege
to promote his own particular religious beliefs."
Hunton & Williams and People for the American Way provided direct legal
representation to the Fredericksburg City Council. The ACLU of Virginia
and Americans United for Separation of Church and State supported the prayer
policy with a friend-of-the-court brief.
The ACLU's amicus brief and the ruling from the Fourth Circuit Court of
Appeals are available at http://www.acluva.org/docket/turner.html.
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