By
suspending Moore for the rest of his term, the nine-member Alabama
Court of the Judiciary has effectively removed him from office for the
second time.
The
outspoken Christian conservative was ousted from office in 2013 for his
stand in defense of the 2 ½ ton monument he had installed in the state
judicial building, but voters later re-elected him.
The
judiciary court ruled that Moore defied law already clearly settled by
the high court's Obergefell vs. Hodges ruling when he told Alabama's
probate judges six months later that they were still bound by a 2015
state court order to deny marriage licenses to gays and lesbians.
"Beyond
question, at the time he issued the January 6, 2016 order, Chief
Justice Roy Moore knew about Obergefell and its clear holding that the
United States Constitution protects the right of same-sex couples to
marry," the court wrote in the unanimous decision.
They
said Moore also flouted a federal judge's order that enjoined the
judges from enforcing Alabama's same sex marriage ban after the U.S.
Supreme Court's decision.
The
50-page decision indicated that a majority of justices wanted to
completely remove Moore — not just suspend him without pay — but they
didn't have the unanimous agreement. The effect, though, is the same.
Moore is off the bench.
Moore's
punishment comes as all three branches of Alabama's government face
upheaval. The Republican speaker of the state House of Representatives
was removed from office this summer for criminal ethics violations. A
legislative committee is weighing whether Gov. Robert Bentley should be
impeached over a scandal involving a top aide.
The
president of the civil rights organization that filed the ethics
complaint against Moore praised the decision as a victory for the state.
"Moore
was elected to be a judge, not a preacher. It's something that he never
seemed to understand. The people of Alabama who cherish the rule of law
are not going to miss the Ayatollah of Alabama," said Richard Cohen, of
the Southern Poverty Law Center.
A lawyer for Moore called the decision a "miscarriage of justice" and announced an appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court.
"The
rule of law should trump political agendas. Sadly, today that is not
the case. What this decision tells us today is that Montgomery has a
long way to go to weed out abuse of political power and restore the rule
of law," said attorney Mat Staver, who also represented Kentucky clerk
Kim Davis in her refusal to issue marriage licenses to gay couples.
Moore,
69, had already been suspended from the bench since May, when the
state's Judicial Inquiry Commission accused him of violating judicial
ethics. By the end of his term in 2019, he'll be beyond the age limit of
70 for judges, unless voters raise the limit in November.
Testifying
under oath Wednesday, Moore said he was simply noting a fact — that the
Alabama Supreme Court's order affirming the state's marriage ban had
not been lifted.
"I gave them a status in the case, a status of the facts that these orders exist. That is all I did," Moore testified.
But
lawyers for the Judicial Inquiry Commission told the court that Moore —
who once referred to judicial rulings allowing gay marriage as
"tyranny" — had been on a mission to block gay marriage from coming to
Alabama.
"We
are here 13 years later because the Chief Justice learned nothing from
his first removal. He continues to defy the law," argued John Carroll, a
lawyer representing the commission.
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