By
KIM CHANDLER - Associated Press
Saturday, September 24, 2016
________________________________________________________________________________
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Alabama
Chief Justice RoyS. Moore the fiery Deep South jurist has been here before.
Moore was removed
as chief justice over a decade ago for refusing to obey a federal court order
to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the state judicial building. Moore faces
removal from office again, this time on accusations that he urged 68 probate
judges to refuse marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
The Court ofthe Judiciary, a state panel that disciplines judges, will hold what is
expected to be a one-day trial-like proceeding on Wednesday to determine if Moore violated canons
of judicial ethics with a January directive to probate judges. Moore in a Jan.
26 administrative order wrote that a 2015 order from the state Supreme Court to
refuse marriage licenses to gay couples remained in “full force and effect.”
The order came six months after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled gays and lesbians
had a fundamental right to marry and after a federal judge said Alabama should
follow that decision.
“We fully expect Roy Moore to be
removed from the bench. I think it is the only sanction that is appropriate,”
Richard Cohen, head of the Southern Poverty Law Center which lodged the initial
complaint against Moore.
“This time he urged 68 probate judges to defy a court order,” Cohen said.
“It was a status report,” his
attorney Mat Staver said of the Jan. 6 administrative order. “He didn’t tell
people to disobey the U.S. Supreme Court.”
John Carroll, a former federal magistrate judge who will litigate the case for the Judicial Inquiry Commission, told the court last month that Moore’s intent was clear and that he should not be allowed to “pretend away” the charges.
Carroll said Moore had displayed escalating frustrations and actions as same-sex marriage became a reality in Alabama, including sending Gov. Robert Bentley a 2015 letter urging the state to stand up to judicial tyranny after a federal judge ruled Alabama’s same-sex marriage ban was unconstitutional.
“He was on a mission not to recognize federal law on same-sex couples,” Carroll told the court in a hearing last month.
Moore had been an outspoken opponent of same-sex marriage, even predicting on the 2012 campaign trail that it would bring the “ultimate destruction” of the country. Staver argued that Moore can’t be put on trial for his personal beliefs and only his actions are relevant to the case.
Staver said he did not know if Moore would take the witness stand. However, some of Moore’s long-time supporters said they expect him to do so just as he did in the 2003 Ten Commandments case.
“He’s going to testify. I know he is. The news is going to be Judge Moore himself is going to testify,” said Dean Young, a long-time Moore supporter.
Moore, a graduate of West Point military academy, was a little known country judge when he hung a homemade Ten Commandments monument in his Etowah County courtroom. The American Civil Liberties Union in 1995 sued over the display and Moore’s habit of opening court with prayer.
The notoriety helped Moore get elected as chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court in 2000. Soon after taking office, he had a 5,280-pound granite Ten Commandments monument installed in the lobby of the state judicial building. A federal judge rules that the display was an unconstitutional endorsement of religion. The Court of the Judiciary in 2003 removed Moore from the bench after Moore failed to obey a court-imposed deadine to remove the monument. Moore was re-elected as chief justice in 2012, a victory he described as a vindication.
Moore’s supporters and opponents are expected to fill the steps of the Alabama Judicial Building in dueling rallies ahead of the Wednesday trial.
It will require a unanimous vote on the nine-member Court ofthe Judiciary to remove Moore from office.
Read more articles from The Washington Times, here.
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