A Louisiana Senate committee advanced two bills Tuesday that seek to criminalize disruptive protests in and near churches, but free speech advocates...
Vous n'êtes pas connecté
Maroc - RAWSTORY.COM - Raw Story - Hier 00:18
A Louisiana Senate committee advanced two bills Tuesday that seek to criminalize disruptive protests in and near churches, but free speech advocates believe they are unconstitutional.A judiciary committee approved Senate Bill 35 by Sen. Bill Wheat, R-Ponchatoula, and Senate Bill 306 by Sen. Rick Edmonds, R-Central, sending them to the full Senate. The bills are among several filed in the wake of a Jan. 18 protest at a Minneapolis church where an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer is a pastor.Edmonds, a church pastor who is running for the 5th Congressional District seat, and Wheat acknowledged they did not know of any similar incidents in Louisiana.“In no way are we trying to infringe upon somebody’s First Amendment protections rights that they have to protest or free speech,” Wheat told the committee. “But at the same time, I don’t think that right of free speech and the right to protest should usurp or override the right of someone to be able to worship freely.”Both bills would impose criminal penalties on protesters who disrupt worship services, though Edmonds’ is more specific, as it lists exact ways the law would be violated.They include:using force, the threat of force, physical obstruction, intentional injury or attempt injury, to intimidate or interfere with religious worshipintentionally damaging or destroying property of a house of worshipdenying lawful freedom of movement on church property or lawful use of church facilitiesrefusing to leave private property of the house of worship when requested by clergy when being disruptiveknowingly financing, funding, or materially supporting a person engaged in these activities Edmonds’ bill is supported by the Louisiana Family Forum and the Louisiana Baptists Office of Public Policy.“We think this is the one that’s most qualified to meet constitutional muster,” Gene Mills, president of the Louisiana Family Forum said of Edmonds’ bill. “The right of free speech ends at the threshold of private property when it’s infringed upon, especially in a house of worship.”Sarah Whittington, advocacy director of the ACLU of Louisiana, said she was concerned that the bills were overbroad. She also noted that the behaviors the lawmakers are seeking to criminalize are already addressed in existing law. Trespassing, damaging property and blocking exits and roadways are already illegal, Whittington said.In the Louisiana House of Representatives, two proposals extend the existing crime of disturbing the peace to disruptive protest at churches.Rep. Gabe Firment, R-Pollock, has a bill that goes further by exempting clergy and church-goers from being sued for physically removing someone trespassing at a house of worship.The house bills have yet been scheduled for a committee hearing.
A Louisiana Senate committee advanced two bills Tuesday that seek to criminalize disruptive protests in and near churches, but free speech advocates...
An Illinois House committee Thursday advanced legislation that could give the Bears a big property tax break and clear the way to a new stadium in...
Protections for religious expression in K-12 schools could also be expanded to guard ideological and political speech through a bill that passed...
Health bills continue to move in the ninth week of the 2026 legislative session, and have just a little more than three weeks left to make it over the...
Health bills continue to move in the ninth week of the 2026 legislative session, and have just a little more than three weeks left to make it over the...
On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry famously delivered his “give me liberty or give me death speech” to the Second Virginia Convention. On Wednesday,...
Republican lawmakers would be able to sue people who use social media to criticize them and call them names under a bill they approved that would make...
For most of the industry’s existence in Virginia, approvals for data centers were largely seen as a local issue – with the state and federal...
For most of the industry’s existence in Virginia, approvals for data centers were largely seen as a local issue – with the state and federal...
Hereditary peers are set to lose their automatic right to sit and vote in the House of Lords, a major reform expected to take effect before the next...