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Judge Roy Moore and Foundation for Moral Law
Argue to Federal Appeals Court that Texas Jury's Use of Bible did not Taint
Deliberations in Death Penalty Case, 'Oliver v. Quarterman'
MEDIA
ADVISORY, March 24 /Christian
Newswire/ -- Former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore and attorneys with
the Foundation for Moral Law argued in an
amicus curiae
brief filed today in the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th
Circuit that a Texas jury's consultation of Bible passages during
death-penalty sentencing deliberations did not taint the jury in violation
of the 6th Amendment. The Foundation argued in the case,
Oliver v. Quarterman, that a jury's use of the Bible is a natural
occurrence since a jury has historically reflected the diversity of the
community from which it is drawn, including members who consider the Bible
an integral part of their faith and morality. (Read
the legal brief here.) Judge Roy
Moore, a former
"For
centuries, the name of God and the sacredness of the Bible in the courts
have traditionally served as powerful reminders of the standard of truth and
justice to which judge, jury, and defendant alike are accountable. To
suggest that the Bible and religious references should now be banned from
jury deliberations is not only a subversion of the purpose of a citizen
jury, but it reflects yet another attempt to sequester God and His law from
our courtrooms and justice system." In the
Oliver case, convicted murderer Khristian Oliver argues that his death
penalty sentence should be overturned because several jury members brought
Bibles and consulted a scripture verse or two in the deliberation room.
Oliver argues that the mere reference to Bible passages tainted the
proceedings and rendered the jury "impartial," in violation of the 6th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The
Foundation, however, explains in its brief that juries are an essential and
historic check by the people on government power and, as such, comprise a
cross-section of the community. To banish the Bible, religious references,
and the people that hold biblical values dear from the jury room would
deprive our juries of that considerable portion of the citizenry that look
to the Bible for comfort, wisdom, and moral judgment. A "Bible-free" jury
would not reflect the communities of this country and would, in effect,
establish a reverse religious test to qualify for jury service. The
Foundation asks the 5th Circuit court to reject Oliver's desperate claims as
constitutionally, historically, and logically baseless. The
Foundation for Moral Law is a
non-profit, religious-liberties organization located in |
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