Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Judge Recuses Herself from Trial of Her Husband's Pro-Life Antagonists

The apostasy at Notre Dame is unmistakable when a virulent pro-abortion politician is invited as guest of honor, pro-life demonstrators are arrested en masse, and pro-abortion demonstrators are welcomed to campus, unmolested by police.

That it took the obviously compromised judge, Jenny Pitts Manier, so long to recuse herself suggests a claustrophobic insiders' game reminiscent of "In the Heat of the Night." Was she actually so obtuse that she didn't recognize her bias, or did she just think nobody would notice, or that nobody would dare press the issue? She gives Hoosiers a bad name. (OK, Hoosiers Charles Manson and Jim Jones were worse than her, but she's an embarrassment.)

Judge Bows Out of Pro-Life Case
by Charlie Butts, OneNewsNow

Almost 90 pro-lifers were arrested at Notre Dame last year while demonstrating against President Obama's graduation speech in South Bend, Indiana. Tom Brechja of the Thomas More Society in Chicago tells OneNewsNow that attorneys Tom Dixon and Dave Wemhoff asked Judge Jenny Pitts Manier to step down "because she was biased."

"Her husband is a tenured professor of philosophy, who not only works for Notre Dame and therefore has a financial interest, but he's also a very outspoken critic of the Catholic Church teaching on the sanctity of life, which of course is exactly what protesters were speaking out in favor of," Brechja notes.

The judge rejected the argument then withdrew from the case shortly after an appeal was filed. The cases will be reassigned to another judge, and Brechja is hopeful that the head of the school, John Jenkins, will ask the county prosecutor to drop the charges against the pro-lifers.

"These are people from all over the country, including Alan Keyes, Norma McCorvey -- a lot of very, very good people," he regards.

At the same time, pro-abortion forces were permitted on Notre Dame property to demonstrate for Obama and for abortion. None were arrested.

No comments: