Oklahoma court sets hearing on Ten Commandments monument

Ponca City Now - August 28, 2015 10:11 am

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) – The Oklahoma Supreme Court has instructed a judge to implement a ruling that a Ten Commandments monument on the state Capitol grounds is unconstitutional and must be removed.

The state’s highest court issued the mandate Thursday to carry out its June 30 decision that the monument is a religious symbol and must be removed because it violates a state constitutional ban on using public property to benefit a religion. The 7-2 ruling was reaffirmed last month when the court denied a rehearing sought by Attorney General Scott Pruitt.

The decision reversed a ruling by Oklahoma County District Judge Thomas Prince, who ruled last year that the monument could stay.

Prince has scheduled a Sept. 11 hearing to comply with the order and determine what will be done with the monument.

 

Latest Stories

The Thunder should have been quite tired. They went 2-0 in Florida anyway, pushing record to 22-5

By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer MIAMI (AP) — Here’s how the last few days have...

Jalen Williams scores 33 points, Thunder remain red-hot by topping Heat 104-97

By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer MIAMI (AP) — Jalen Williams scored a season-high 33 points,...

Oklahoma Lawmakers File Appeal Challenging OG&E Rate Increase And Corporation Commission Audits

Three Oklahoma state representatives announced Thursday that they have filed an appeal with the Oklahoma Supreme...