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The Cincinnati Enquirer/AP

NEWS

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Oct. 23, 1998

How Wyo. Town Dealt With Protests

Anti-gay protesters at the funeral of Matthew Shepard (AP/Michael S. Green)WASHINGTON (AP) Anti-homosexual protests outside a gay murder victim's funeral: It sounds like a prescription for trouble, or at least a major lawsuit.

Court fights have raged for years over limits on picketing at abortion clinics. But when officials in Casper, Wyo., adopted a 50-foot no-protest zone for beating victim Matthew Shepard's funeral, even the demonstrators were pleased.

Anti-gay funeral protesters The goal was to protect public safety and ``the First Amendment rights of not only those protesting, but those wanting to go into the church,'' said Jack Stewart, the city attorney. ``We had to strike a balance, and frankly, it worked well.''

Anti-gay funeral protesters ``It was an ideal arrangement,'' said the Rev. Fred Phelps, pastor of Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan. He and his followers engage in anti-homosexual picketing around the country with the central message: ``God hates fags.''

Phelps' group sent Stewart a letter of thanks after the Oct. 16 funeral.

Stewart said officials knew emotions would be high. Shepard had been pistol-whipped and tied to a fence in near-freezing temperatures. Police said robbery was the main motive, but he also was singled out because of his homosexuality.

A police officer watches over the protest (AP/Michael S. Green) Members of Phelps' church announced they would picket. So Stewart's office made a quick study of court rulings on previous attempts to limit anti-abortion and anti-homosexual protests.

``During that week we were living in a constitutional exam in law school,'' he said.

Here is what they found:

  • In 1994, the Supreme Court upheld a 36-foot no-protest zone around a Florida abortion clinic but said protesters could not be barred from approaching patients within 300 feet of the clinic.

  • Last year, the justices upheld a 15-foot buffer zone around New York abortion clinics but threw out a provision that required demonstrators to stay 15 feet away from clinic patients or staff members even outside that zone.

  • In 1995, a federal judge threw out a Kansas law that prohibited picketing outside funerals, on the ground that it was too vague. State legislators later enacted a new law that spelled out the time period when such picketing is barred.

Stewart's office also studied a Topeka ordinance, enacted because of Phelps' previous protests, that prohibits picketing on public property within 50 feet of places where funerals are held.

Anti-gay funeral protesters The day before Shepard's funeral, the Casper City Council adopted the 50-foot no-protest zone for all funerals in the city. That kept the 17 protesters, and a group of counterprotesters, across the street from the Episcopal church.

Without the ordinance, ``I believe we would have had a lot of physical injury and a melee would have broken out,'' Stewart said.

More Christianiny ala Rev. Phelps

Phelps said members of his group worried about their own safety and that the no-protest zone was ``altogether constitutional when the distance is so minuscule.''

Anti-gay funeral protesters Not everyone agrees.

There should be no ``funeral exception to the First Amendment,'' said Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice. He represents anti-abortion protesters in challenging limits on demonstrations.

Button Graphic: God, protect us from your followers Sekulow said he strongly opposes anti-homosexual protests at funerals but contended they nonetheless are constitutionally protected free speech.

``I don't think that a speech-free zone (at a funeral) is any more constitutional than a buffer zone around an abortion clinic,'' Sekulow said.

Button Graphic: The christian right is neither. Nonetheless, the Supreme Court has allowed some limits, and Stewart said Casper officials tried to follow the precedents.

``The city's mission in this was to ensure that the proper dignity and respect that happens in a funeral occurs, and at the same time to respect everybody's First Amendment rights,'' Stewart said.

Button Graphic: Any one who thinks God is on their side is as dangerous as hell EDITOR'S NOTE: Laurie Asseo covers the Supreme Court and legal issues for the Associated Press.


By: Laurie Asseo, Associated Press Writer
The Cincinnati Enquirer/AP
Oct. 23, 1998

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