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FATHER OF SLAIN MARINE WINS CASE AGAINST FUNERAL
PROTESTERS -- "They turned this funeral into a
media circus,
and they wanted to hurt my family...My son should
have been
buried with dignity, not with a bunch of clowns
outside."

For more about the Westboro Baptist Church, use
the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=westboro&op=and
Story here...
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal
-westboro1031,0,7191706.story?coll=bal_news_local_xpromo
Story below:
Learn
More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Father of slain Marine wins case against funeral
protesters
Pa. man awarded nearly $11 million in
compensatory and punitive damages
By Matthew Dolan
Sun reporter
The brokenhearted father of a Marine killed in Iraq won a long-shot legal
fight today after a federal jury in Baltimore awarded him nearly $11
million in a verdict against members of a Kansas church who hoisted
anti-gay placards at his son's Westminster funeral.
The jury's announcement 24 hours after deliberations first began was met
with tears and hugs from the family and supporters of Lance Cpl. Matthew
Snyder, whose March 2006 funeral was protested by members of the Westboro
Baptist Church with signs including "Thank God for dead soldiers."
Snyder's father, Albert, won on every count of his complaint, as well as
$2.9 million for compensatory damages and $8 million for punitive damages.
Over the past week, the civil trial in U.S. District Court in Baltimore
turned into a constitutional debate over how far the First Amendment
should extend to protect the most extreme forms of expression. The
groundbreaking verdict is believed to be the first time the fundamental
Christian church from Topeka that is composed mainly of family members has
been successfully sued for its shock funeral protests.
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One legal expert worried that the initial size of
the compensatory judgment, which was awarded first, could be a setback for
those who believe in broad free-speech protections.
"The award -- $2.9 million -- is an awful lot of money for compensatory
damages," University of Maryland law professor Mark Graber said today.
"This was in a public space. While the actions are reprehensible, the
First Amendment protects a lot that's reprehensible."
U.S. District Judge Richard D. Bennett, who had sealed the church's
financial documents, said from the bench that the compensatory damage
award would already eclipse Westboro's assets.
A decision in the free speech case was closely watched after Westboro
members criss-crossed the country in recent years, turning somber funerals
of soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan into attention-grabbing platforms to
criticize gays as immoral and damned.
Carrying brightly colored signs with inflammatory messages at reportedly
more than 30,000 protests, including hundreds of military funerals,
members of the congregation say the nation is losing soldiers on the
battlefield because the country has been too accepting of gays in every
part of American society, including in the military.
Counter-protests often follow and groups like the Patriot Guard have
cropped up to try to shield families from the church's controversial signs
and songs.
Alarmed by Westboro protests, at least 22 states enacted or proposed laws
to limit the rights of protesters at funerals. Only months after Matthew
Snyder's death, Maryland passed a law prohibiting people from picketing
within 100 feet of a funeral, memorial, burial or procession.
The courtroom fight came down to whether Westboro had a legal right to
demonstrate at the March 2006 funeral of Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder or
whether the protesters crossed the line because their message impugned the
grieving family's reputation and unlawfully invaded the Snyders' privacy.
The Marine's father from York, Pa., sued the church and three of its
members for intentionally invading his privacy because his deceased son
did not have that right any longer. For the claim to be successful, the
jury needed to conclude that the church's actions at the funeral -- and
later, in a posting about Matthew Snyder on its Web site -- were "highly
offensive to a reasonable person," according to the jury instructions.
Albert Snyder also claimed that the church's actions were an intentional
infliction of emotional distress. Under the law, the five women and four
women of the jury needed to find that the church's conduct was
"intentional or reckless" to find for Snyder. Jury instructions also
required that the conduct be "extreme and outrageous," leading to severe
emotional distress.
"You must balance the defendants' expression of religious belief with
another citizen's right to privacy," presiding judge Richard D. Bennett
instructed jurors yesterday.
The weeklong trial brought together Snyder and his family and the progeny
of Fred Phelps Sr., a retired attorney and founder of Westboro whose
71-member congregation is largely made up of his relatives. The suit names
the church as defendants, as well as Phelps and his two daughters.
In the courtroom, the Phelps family dressed plainly. In testimony, they
stood steadfast to their beliefs and did not apologize for their conduct.
Often overcome by emotion, Albert Snyder sat flanked by his attorneys.
While the Westboro's attorney, Jonathan Katz, spoke, Snyder averted his
eyes. But when the videos made of the protest at his son's funeral aired
for the jury in closing arguments, he wept.
When called to the stand last week, the father railed against Westboro,
saying that sight of the protest made him physically ill.
"They turned this funeral into a media circus, and they wanted to hurt my
family," Snyder testified, according to the Associated Press. "They wanted
their message heard, and they didn't care who they stepped over. My son
should have been buried with dignity, not with a bunch of clowns outside."
Fred Phelps took the stand after Snyder and prompted a strong admonition
from Bennett when the pastor said he had not considered whether children
would see a sign carried by protesters with the words "Semper Fi Fags" and
two stick figures that appeared to be engaged in sodomy, according to the
AP.
Church members always insisted that their March 10, 2006, demonstration
took place legally, 1,000 feet from St. John Roman Catholic Church where
the funeral was held. In closing arguments, the two sides battled over the
nature of the protest to determine if the speech was constitutionally
protected.
Sean E. Summers, Snyder's attorney, pointed out that Westboro members
personally targeted the family because they brought Marine-specific signs
to their rally at the funeral and dredged up Snyder's marital history on
their Web site in an essay, "The Burden of Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder."
But Katz argued that the protest was no different from the thousands of
others taken up by Westboro. Nothing about their demonstration was so
offensive or damaging, the defense attorney said, to rise to the level of
a libelous attack on the family.
Past protests by Westboro have produced so much negative reaction that
they routinely alert local police departments of their plans so police can
provide additional security. The defendants staged another protest on
Pratt Street near the U.S. District courthouse at lunchtime today before
the verdict was announced.
What sometimes took a back seat in the federal free speech trial was the
life and death of Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder, a 2003 Westminster High
School graduate. Synder, a victim of a vehicle accident in Anbar province
in March 2006, had been in the war zone less than a month.
Snyder's sexual preference never became an issue at the trial. Church
members said they did not target Snyder's funeral because they believed
the Marine was gay.
Instead, they said they waved fire-and-brimstone placards -- "Thank God
for IEDs" and "Fag Troops" among others -- near the funeral motorcade to
bring attention to their message.
Snyder testified that he never saw the content of the signs as he entered
and left St. John's Roman Catholic Church on the day of his son's funeral.
He glimpsed the signs for the first time during television news reports
later that day. A Google search on the Internet weeks later led him to the
church's Web site and the posting about Matthew Snyder.
matthew.dolan@baltsun.com
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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