Judge intervenes to let tea party hand out Constitution
Just in time for the Independence Day holiday, a judge in California has intervened to allow members of the tea party there to hand out copies of the U.S. Constitution, which had been banished by a local library board decision.
The news of the battle comes from Brad Dacus, of Pacific Justice Institute, who has been fighting officials in Redding, Calif., since earlier this year on behalf of tea party groups who want to give out copies of America's founding document.
"As a matter of policy, they said they could not pass out the Constitution … We're talking about outside the library in the breezeway, where people have passed things out before. [Library officials] saw this group, a tea party group, passing out the Constitution and specifically amended their policy to make it more restrictive," he told WND.
A judge in Shasta County Superior Court now, however, has granted a preliminary injunction against the library, clearing the way for a distribution when tea party members choose, Dacus said.
The court case originated several months ago when PJI and Redding attorney Tim Pappas filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Redding-based Bostonian Tea Party, the North State Tea Party Alliance and tea party official SuAnn Prigmore.
The residents distributed copies of the Constitution and other patriotic-themed materials in the library's breezeway during Constitution Week last September. Library officials immediately sought to restrict the peaceful sharing of such ideas, even though other groups also have distributed materials at that location, Dacus said.