The Arizona State Legislature in Phoenix, meanwhile, passed legislation Tuesday that bars protesters at funerals from getting within 300 feet of services.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/01/11/arizona.shooting/index.html?hpt=T1
The Arizona State Legislature in Phoenix, meanwhile, passed legislation Tuesday that bars protesters at funerals from getting within 300 feet of services.
Why haven't other states passed laws like this?
Nit pick. It isn't a ban, but a protest free zone. That's important because Westboro could have an outright ban overruled.
Westboro will challenge this law as unconstitutional, and if they win, will get more funding for their wacko cause through civil litigation and collecting legal fees (they are their own lawyers).
Its not unconstitutional if you agree with it.I thought free speech zones were unconstitutional? Oh how the ATPN world turns...
Its not unconstitutional if you agree with it.
/sarcasm
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Its not unconstitutional if you agree with it.
Why haven't other states passed laws like this?
They have. And in a completely unsurprising twist, the laws have never actually been used for their stated purpose, but have been misused to stifle free speech and abuse innocent people.
In Michigan, a decorated military veteran and his wife were arrested for driving a van with political signs in a funeral procession. They were close friends of the deceased and had been invited by his family to participate in the procession and funeral. But two scumbag pigs were offended by the anti-Bush slogans, so they arrested the victims under the funeral protest law. Prosecutors dropped charges at the deceased's family's request, but by that time the funeral was over and the victims had missed it.
This is the inevitable result of any law that infringes on civil rights, no matter how minor the infringment may seem. Give the government any additional power and it will be abused.
Please provide direct factual information which verifies the motives (that they only did so out of vindictive spite) of the police officers with their enforcement of a state law? Unless you are of the inconsistent belief that police should pick and choose which laws they should enforce.
Unless I'm mistaken and it's not private property, in which case it's great but needs to be more than 300 ft. Make it like 100 yards.![]()
Westboro will challenge this law as unconstitutional, and if they win, will get more funding for their wacko cause through civil litigation and collecting legal fees (they are their own lawyers).
Is this really necessary? Pretty sure cemeteries/mortuaries are private property? First Amendment doesn't protect a right to trespass. I don't object to the reason behind it, but it seems redundant, waste of legislative energy, symbolic only, and purely knee jerk and emotional. Just another meaningless empty law on the books when those assholes could all be booked for trespassing on private property.
Unless I'm mistaken and it's not private property, in which case it's great but needs to be more than 300 ft. Make it like 100 yards.![]()
