ACLU Again Refuses to Ask U.S. Supreme Court to Review Ten Commandments Case

Aug 16, 2010

www.LC.org

The ACLU has allowed the time to expire without filing a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court requesting review of the Ten Commandments case in ACLU v. Grayson County, Kentucky. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling, which upheld the Ten Commandments in the “Foundations of American Law and Government Display,” now stands. Since 2005, this is the fourth time the ACLU has lost a Ten Commandments case and refused to ask the Supreme Court to review the matter.

The case began in 2002, when the ACLU filed a lawsuit against Grayson County and a federal judge ruled against the display. Mathew Staver, Founder of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty University School of Law, presented the winning oral argument on behalf of Grayson County in April 2009 at the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Liberty Counsel did not charge the counties for attorney's fees in this case. In fact, we never charge clients for any legal work. Your generous donations enabled us to vigorously fight this battle. Please continue to support our efforts to defeat the ACLU in other cases like this. You can donate online or by mail to PO Box 540774, Orlando, FL 32854. You can also order resources from the Liberty Counsel online store.

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