Court temporarily limits scope of ruling that Louisiana's Ten Commandments law is unconstitutional
Source: AP
Updated 6:57 PM EST, November 15, 2024
NEW ORLEANS (AP) A federal appeals court in New Orleans on Friday temporarily limited the scope of a ruling that Louisianas law requiring public schools to post the Ten Commandments in all classrooms next year is unconstitutional.
U.S. District Judge John deGravelles ruling that the law is unconstitutional remains in effect under the order from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. However, the appellate court temporarily blocked a part of the ruling that requires state education officials to notify public schools statewide that the law has been struck down.
State attorneys said in an emergency stay motion filed Wednesday that deGravelles finding that the commandments posting requirement is unconstitutional only affects five local school systems that are defendants in the case. They said deGravelles overstepped his authority when he ordered that schools in all 72 districts be notified of his finding. They asked that the notification requirement be paused immediately while they appeal all of deGravelles order. That broader appeal was filed later Friday night.
Fridays 5th Circuit order was a temporary administrative stay granted in response to the states emergency request. The order may be altered or lifted as the appeal progresses. Judges Jerry Smith, nominated to the court by former President Ronald Reagan, and Kurt Engelhardt, nominated by former President Donald Trump, voted to grant the stay in a one-sentence order. A footnote said Judge James Graves, nominated by former President Barack Obama, would have denied the stay.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/louisiana-schools-ten-commandments-bebd5993af3070e69614de641f4f511f
ck4829
(35,902 posts)By the way, not just this, but every ruling related to healthcare by the fifth circuit is a failure of the American healthcare system
usonian
(13,772 posts)Working on the short list.