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10th Circuit Hears Oklahoma Sharia Law Argument |
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Written by Don Byrd
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Tuesday, 13 September 2011 |
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A 3-judge panel of the 10th Circuit yesterday questioned attorneys over the constitutionality of Oklahoma's anti-Sharia referendum, passed by voters last year. The Denver Post reports:
A three-judge panel of federal 10th
Circuit judges on Monday repeatedly asked Patrick Wyrick, Oklahoma's
solicitor general, why Shariah law was singled out and whether that
amounts to discrimination against Muslims.
"Doesn't it disfavor Islam as a religion?" Judge Scott Matheson Jr. asked.
Wyrick responded that it doesn't because the initiative is intended
only to apply to aspects of Shariah that would claim legal precedence.
But opponents of the initiative — who filed suit last year to block
its certification — say the law denies Muslims rights that would be
afforded to people of other religions.
The Baptist Joint Committee filed a brief earlier this year urging the 10th Circuit to find the law unconstitutional. A trial judge temporarily halted the measure late lat year.
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