FFRF objects to religious patches on Shelby County sheriffs uniforms

1ShelbyCountyOH

The Freedom From Religion Foundation, a national state/church watchdog, is formally objecting to religious patches on Shelby County, Ohio officer uniforms.

After receiving a complaint about the patches, which say ā€œFor God and Country,ā€ FFRF sent a letter to the Sheriffā€™s Office requesting the patches be removed immediately.

ā€œIt is inappropriate and unconstitutional for the Shelby County Sheriffā€™s Office to promote or endorse religion,ā€ reads FFRFā€™s letter. ā€œAnyone viewing these patches would understand the Sheriffā€™s Office to be endorsing religion and belief in a god.ā€

Additionally, it is unconstitutional and coercive to require Sheriffā€™s Office employees to display a religious message on their uniform, FFRF points out.

ā€œOfficers of the law take an oath to protect and serve all citizens,ā€ writes FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. ā€œIt is impossible for citizens to feel equally protected when officers openly display religious preference on their uniforms.ā€

Law enforcement must be impartial and avoid any appearance of bias toward some citizens or hostility toward others. Religious endorsements made by a department send a message that excludes the 24 percent of American adults who identify as nonreligious, including 38 percent of Millennials and younger Americans. The Shelby County Sheriffā€™s Office is needlessly alienating non-Christian and nonreligious citizens in its city, turning them into political outsiders in their own community.  

Gaylor expressed concern that the patches not only send an intimidating and unconstitutional message to the public, but an exclusionary one to sheriffā€™s deputies, who themselves might be nonreligious.

Government employees can worship, pray, or read any religious text they wish when acting in their personal capacities. But they are not permitted to provide prestige to their personal religion through the machinery of a government office. Sheriffs and deputies take an oath to uphold our godless and entirely secular constitution and must keep their personal religious views out of law enforcement, Gaylor added.

FFRF is a national nonprofit organization with more than 32,000 members across the country, including more than 800 members and a chapter in Ohio.

Freedom From Religion Foundation

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