FFRF unfortunately had to help teach a Florida police chief the U.S. Constitution.
In June, FFRF sent a letter to Oviedo Chief of Police Jeffrey Chudnow regarding an Oviedo Police Department Awards Ceremony and Career Track Recognition held in March at the Reformed Theological Seminary, a church and religious school. The program included a religious invocation.
“It is a fundamental principle of Establishment Clause jurisprudence that the government cannot promote, advance or otherwise endorse religion,” FFRF Staff Attorney Andrew Seidel wrote to Chudnow. “Allowing prayer at an awards ceremony sends the message that the police department not only prefers religion over nonreligion, but also Christianity over other faiths.”
FFRF has asked him to discontinue the practice of opening Oviedo Police Department ceremonies with invocations and holding official events at facilities that are religious in nature.
Chudnow replied last month, asserting that the Oviedo Police Department had no “intention of establishing any religion.” Anyway, he said, as a man practicing the Jewish faith, he wasn’t “offended” by the invocation and didn’t receive any complaints.
FFRF quickly responded. In a follow-up letter, FFRF contended the fact that the OPD did not “have any intention of establishing of any religion” is irrelevant. The inclusion of an invocation at an official ceremony gives the impression that the department — and, hence the government — endorses religion.
Seidel also addressed the chief’s second point: “Those offended by the invocation, marginalized by the display of state-sanctioned religion at a secular awards ceremony, would not seek redress from the OPD and risk making themselves targets for ridicule or persecution. Also, we complained.”
Chudnow seems to have missed the point. In a second response dated July 18, he claimed that the interpretation of the First Amendment by the courts was fluid and unsettled. Besides, he stated, he had seen a copy of the Ten Commandments hanging in the chambers of the U.S. Supreme Court during a 2009 visit.
FFRF has attempted to lay his misconceptions to rest in another letter.
It agreed with Chudnow that the First Amendment protects the right of private citizens to freely exercise religion, but informed him this protection does not extend to a government agency or to a person acting in his or her official capacity.
And, FFRF said, his contention about First Amendment law is dubious.
“Your statement that the religion clauses of the First Amendment are ‘fluid and dynamic’ is problematic,” Seidel writes to Chudnow. “Regardless of the composition of the Supreme Court, the justices have referred time and again to the words of Thomas Jefferson in interpreting the Establishment Clause and will likely continue to do so well into the future. Jefferson’s ‘wall of separation between church and state’ has been repeatedly noted as the central organizing principle presented by the Establishment Clause.”
As for the Ten Commandments display that Chudnow thought he saw hanging on the wall inside the U.S. Supreme Court building, that wasn’t really the Ten Commandments. The single tablet (not two, as in the Ten Commandments stories) bearing Roman numerals that appears in the East Courtroom frieze is actually a representation of the Bill of Rights. Tablets bearing only the Roman numerals I-X appear on the support frame of the courtroom’s bronze gates, on the lower interior panel of the courtroom doors, and held by a figure in the woodwork of the library, again, signifying the Bill of Rights, not the Ten Commandments.
“We are delighted that we have contributed to the edification of a police chief,” says FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. “We hope that this education will get him to acknowledge that he has been constitutionally wrong.”