Nov 16, 2004
From: The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty1350 Connecticut Avenue NW – Suite 605
Washington, D.C. 20036
Contact: Jared N. Leland, Esq.: (202) 349-7206
Kelly Jane Torrance: (202) 349-7202
Rubenstein Associates, Inc.
Public Relations -- (212) 843-8085Contact: Jim Grossman
For Immediate Release: Nov. 16, 2004
Federal court upholds Catholic school’s right to dismiss religion teacher
who publicly opposed the Church’s teaching against abortion;
Becket Fund calls decision “a victory for religious institutions and schools throughout the country”
The United States District Court in
“Judge
Michele Curay-Cramer taught Religion and English at
In an unequivocal decision released today, District Judge Kent Jordan dismissed all of Curay-Cramer’s claims. He called her argument that the Catholic school was not a religious institution “patently absurd” and “illogical.”
Asking the court to apply federal employment law in this case would raise “substantial constitutional questions,” Judge Jordan wrote: “Short of a declaration that the Pope should pass draft encyclicals through the courts for approval, it is hard to conceive of a more obvious violation of the free exercise rights of the Catholic Church or a clearer case of inappropriate entanglement of church and state.”
He concluded, “It is not the place of this or any other court to say what system of beliefs constitutes ‘true’ Catholicism or makes for a ‘good’ Catholic. Ours is a system which, wonderfully, forbids any intrusion of the sort.”