Iseman v. New York Times
Washington, D.C., lobbyist sues the New York Times for falsely reporting that she had an illicit "romantic" and unethical relationship with Sen. John McCain.
Newdow v. Roberts
Atheists sue for a court order enjoining U.S. Supreme Court chief justice from including "so help me God" in the presidential oath he administers to Barack Obama.
Tyler v. California
California Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown says the Prop 8 ban on gay marriage is unconstitutional because it abrogates fundamental rights without a compelling interest.
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• 8th Circuit finds that Arkansas counties cannot sue cold medicine manufacturers over the misuse of pseudoephedrine in their products by methamphetamine cooks. "[W]e are very reluctant to open Pandora's box to the avalanche of actions that would follow if we found this case to state a cause of action under Arkansas law."
Ashley County v. Pfizer

• Alabama appeals court declines to "recogniz[e] as a rule of law that alimony is terminated once a recipient former spouse enters into a homosexual relationship."
J.L.M. v. S.A.K.

• New York judge finds no copyright infringement in a scene from the movie "What Women Want" which used a "Silver Slugger" pinball machine as a background prop. The machine "appears so fleetingly that I conclude there is no plausible claim for copyright infringement here."
Gottlieb Development v. Paramount Pictures

• D.C. Circuit says a prison inmate cannot stop having his DNA extracted from tissue and fluid samples for a national database because of his religious beliefs. Russell Kaemmerling "alleges no religious observance that the DNA Act impedes, or acts in violation of his religious beliefs that it pressures him to perform."
Kaemmerling v. Lappin

• Former Delaware jail detainee blames the death of his "irreplaceable" pet parrot on jail staff who refused to provide him with a telephone so he could arrange for its safekeeping. With Thomas Goodrich unable to make bail for 11 days, the "wonderful and intelligent Blue & Gold macaw" died of starvation. Goodrich v. Danberg

• South Carolina judge strikes down a law authorizing the state to issue a special “Christian” license plate featuring a cross, a stained-glass window and the words “I Believe.” "Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that the legislation at issue is 'entirely motivated by a purpose to advance religion,' specifically Christianity." Summers v. Adams

• Florida Supreme Court publicly reprimands 1st District Court of Appeal Judge Michael Allen for questioning the ethics of a colleague in an opinion. "An appellate judge cannot use his opinion-writing power to inappropriately personally attack another appellate judge by accusing him of a crime."
Inquiry Concerning Judge Allen

• D.C. Court of Appeals affirms the defense judgment in Roy Pearson's $54 million lost pants case against a dry cleaner. "[W]e agree with the trial court that Pearson’s expansive interpretation of 'Satisfaction Guaranteed' is not supported by law or reason." Pearson v. Chung

• Former U.S. Marine sues the Treasury Department to block the bailout of AIG, alleging the insurance giant "engages in Shariah-based Islamic religious activities that are anti-Christian, anti-Jewish, and anti-American." Murray v. Paulson

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Texas Court Finds Polygamy Church Kids Not in Danger



A Texas appeals court has absolutely gutted the state's rationale for removing more than 460 children from the ranch of a polygamous sect, saying the group's “pervasive belief system” was not sufficient evidence of physical danger to the children.

The state contends the families who belong to the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) are in effect a “single household” united by the common belief that it is acceptable for girls to marry, have sex, and bear children as soon as they reach puberty.

During the April 3 raid on the FLDS' Yearning for Zion (YFZ) ranch in Eldorado, Texas, child welfare officials found five pregnant minors living there.

But 38 of the mothers at the ranch challenged the removal of their children. And in granting their petition for a writ of mandamus, the Third Court of Appeal in Austin soundly repudiated the state's “where there's smoke, there's fire” logic.

“The existence of the FLDS belief system as described by the [child welfare] Department's witnesses, by itself, does not put children of FLDS parents in physical danger,” the court said in a per curiam opinion, and

Even if one views the FLDS belief system as creating a danger of sexual abuse by grooming boys to be perpetrators of sexual abuse and raising girls to be victims of sexual abuse as the Department contends, there is no evidence that this danger is “immediate” or “urgent” as contemplated by section 262.201 [of the Texas Family Code] with respect to every child in the community.

Section 262.201 says children can only be removed on an emergency basis from their homes if the state shows that there was a danger to their health and safety and that there was an urgent need for their protection which required their removal.

That showing, the court said, must be tailored toward whether the FLDS' beliefs have put “specific individuals” in danger. But the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services

failed to offer any evidence that any of the pubescent female children of the Relators [who filed the writ petition] were in such physical danger. The record is silent as to whether the Relators or anyone in their households are likely to subject their pubescent female children to underage marriage or sex.

The decision gives the trial court 10 days to vacate its orders granting temporary custody of the children to the state. An attorney for the mothers predicted it will become a precedent for other FLDS mothers at the ranch whose children have been taken from them.

“It's a great day for families in Texas,” said Julie Balovich of Texas RioGrande Legal Aid. “It's a great day for justice in Texas.”

The appeals court issued a similar order today in a case brought by three other FLDS mothers. In re Louisa Bradshaw.

The state will almost certainly appeal. But the removal of the YFZ children appears to be turning into as big a fiasco for law enforcement as the raid on the FLDS community of Short Creek, Ariz., in July 1953.

UPDATES

  • The state filed an appeal May 23 with the Texas Supreme Court, arguing that "there was sufficient evidence ... that the household to which each child would be returned included a person(s) who had sexually abused another child." Another brief requests an emergency stay on the appeals court's order.



  • The Texas Supreme Court denied the state's appeal in a May 29 decision, finding that "On the record before us, removal of the children was not warranted." In a partial dissent, Justice Harriet O'Neill said "the trial court did not abuse its discretion as to the demonstrably endangered population of pubescent girls."

  • By Matthew Heller
    5/22/08



     
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    On Trial
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