Supreme Court Refuses to Hear Boy Scouts' Appeal
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, March 8, 2004
WASHINGTON The Supreme Court refused Monday to hear an
appeal from the Boy Scouts over what the organization says is
discrimination because of its policy against hiring gays.
The case revisited the gay rights fight surrounding the high
court's ruling four years ago that the Boy Scouts have the right to
ban openly homosexual leaders. This time, the question was
whether states may treat the Scouts differently than other
organizations because of that policy.
The Scouts asked the justices to hear a case from Connecticut,
where officials dropped the group from a list of charities that
receive donations through a state employee payroll deduction plan.
That's unconstitutional discrimination, the Boy Scouts argued.
"To exclude the Boy Scouts from a forum based on their values
they hold and the conduct they require of their members is to
exclude Boy Scouts based on viewpoint and identity," lawyers for
the Scouts argued in their Supreme Court appeal.
The Scouts took in about $10,000 annually from the employee
charity campaign, the filing said.
The Boy Scouts are pursuing a similar court fight in San Diego,
where city officials want to evict the group from a park where the
organization runs a youth aquatic center. The Bush administration
sided with the Scouts in that case last week.
Connecticut officials also raised the issue of discrimination to
explain why the Scouts were dropped from the State Employee
Campaign Committee in 2000.
A state "human rights commission" had found that including the Boy
Scouts of America in the employee donation program would violate
Connecticut's gay rights law, state Connecticut attorney General
Richard Blumenthal argued to the high court.
The gay rights law prohibits the state from "becoming a party
to any agreement, arrangement or plan which has the effect of
sanctioning discrimination," the state's legal filing said.
A federal appeals court ruled last year that Connecticut did not
violate the Scouts' First Amendment rights. Connecticut's policy
was intended more to protect gays than to silence the views of
groups like the Scouts, the court said in upholding then ruling of
a lower federal judge.
American Legion, Campus Crusade for Christ and numerous
other organizations filed friend-of-the-court briefs supporting the
Boy Scouts.
"Permitting this decision to stand would open the door for
other governmental action that seeks to advance a political agenda
by forcing those who oppose it to relinquish their constitutionally
protected views, beliefs and practices in exchange for a government
benefit that was otherwise available," lawyers for a Catholic public
interest law firm, Thomas More Law Center, argued.
The case is Boy Scouts of America vs. Wyman, 03-956.
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