From Office of TX Attorney General <[email protected]>
Subject AG Paxton Pushes Back Against Court Decision Threatening Religious Liberty
Date July 6, 2022 7:19 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Seal________________________________________________________________________




*FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE*

July 6, 2022

www.texasattorneygeneral.gov




*PRESS OFFICE: (512) 463-2050*

[email protected]





 

* *

*AG Paxton Pushes Back Against Court Decision* 

*Threatening Religious Liberty *  

 

AUSTIN –Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton joined an Oklahoma-led multistate amicus brief urging an en banc rehearing of a decision by the Denver-based U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals that threatens the freedom of religious groups to select their own leaders and operate free from the entanglements of government overregulation. In that case, a faith-based K-12 religious school fired a chaplain who sued to challenge his termination. Typically, a court will decide preliminarily, and as a matter of law, whether a religious organization can be sued in such a case, or whether the “ministerial exception” applies and grants it discretion to choose its spiritual leadership. Here, the court held that the jury should decide that question.

 

Without a rehearing, the Ninth Circuit panel’s “opinion . . . will cause severe and sustained entanglement between religious institutions and government, as well as infringement on the religious liberty rights of countless individuals and organizations,” the brief says. “[J]uries will now be tasked with analyzing significant religious questions, courts will be forced to mediate discovery disputes probing religious doctrine and religious intent, and religious adherents and organizations will have no recourse against a wayward trial court decision that threatens to invade some of the most critical aspects of religious practice—the choice of leadership. The panel’s decision was a radical departure from existing case law and Supreme Court precedent.”

 

The case is Tucker v. Faith Bible Chapel International (9th Cir., No. 20-1230). Read the amicus brief here [ [link removed] ].

 

 

   

###







Stay Connected with Office of Texas Attorney General on
Facebook [ [link removed] ] - Twitter [ [link removed] ] - Instagram [ [link removed] ] - Email [ [link removed] ]

 Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page [ [link removed] ]. You will need to use your email address to log in. If you have questions or problems with the subscription service, please visit subscriberhelp.govdelivery.com [ [link removed] ].


________________________________________________________________________

This email was sent to [email protected] using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Office of Texas Attorney General ·300 W. 15th Street · Austin, TX 78701 GovDelivery logo [ [link removed] ]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis