Arkansas Judge Orders Removal of Ten Commandments Displays from Lakeside School District
Public schools are now required to 鈥減rominently鈥 display a 鈥渉istorical representation鈥 of the Ten Commandments in classrooms and libraries.
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A federal judge on Friday ordered Ten Commandments posters be removed from Lakeside School District, two days after he permitted the Garland County district to be added to a lawsuit challenging a new state law requiring the displays.
Following passage of this spring, public schools are now required to 鈥減rominently鈥 display a 鈥渉istorical representation鈥 of the Ten Commandments in classrooms and libraries. The posters must be donated or bought with funds from voluntary contributions. The law also requires them to be displayed in public colleges and universities and other public buildings maintained by taxpayer funds.
Seven Northwest Arkansas families of various religious and nonreligious backgrounds in June challenging the constitutionality of the statute. The families allege the state law violates the First Amendment鈥檚 Establishment Clause, which guarantees that 鈥淐ongress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,鈥 and its Free Exercise Clause, which guarantees that 鈥淐ongress shall make no law 鈥 prohibiting the free exercise [of religion].鈥
Supporters of the law have argued the tenets have historical significance because they influenced the country鈥檚 founders in creating the nation鈥檚 laws and legal system.
U.S. District Judge Timothy Brooks in August that blocked implementation of the statute in four districts 鈥 Bentonville, Fayetteville, Siloam Springs and Springdale.
Brooks later allowed the Conway School District as a defendant and district families as plaintiffs. He also Ten Commandments posters be removed from the district鈥檚 schools and a temporary restraining order against the district into a preliminary injunction.
A temporary restraining order temporarily halts an action and may be issued immediately, without informing all parties and without holding a hearing. It鈥檚 intended to last until a court holds a hearing on whether to grant a preliminary injunction, according to .
After Brooks Wednesday to add Lakeside School District as a defendant and Christine Benson and her minor child as plaintiffs in the case, attorneys for the plaintiffs filed a for a temporary restraining order and/or preliminary injunction on Thursday.
Brooks granted the temporary restraining order Friday and held the preliminary injunction in abeyance. He also temporarily blocked Lakeside from complying with the law and ordered the district to remove Ten Commandments displays from its schools by 5 p.m. Monday.
鈥淎 temporary restraining order should issue as to Lakeside School District No. 9,鈥 Brooks wrote in Friday鈥檚 . 鈥淟akeside Plaintiffs are identically situated to the original Plaintiffs: They advance the same legal arguments, assert the same constitutional injuries, and request the same relief.鈥
Defendants and the attorney general鈥檚 office, which intervened in the case, have until Nov. 3 to submit briefs to address why the existing preliminary injunction should not be modified to include Lakeside School District as a defendant, according to Friday鈥檚 order.
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