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Neb. town settles lawsuit brought by Westboro churchwoman

By The Associated Press
07.28.10

LINCOLN, Neb. — An Omaha suburb has paid a member of a Kansas church that protests at soldiers' funerals $17,000. In exchange, Shirley Phelps-Roper has dropped her lawsuit against Bellevue.

The settlement with Westboro Baptist Church, which claims that U.S. troop deaths are punishment for the nation's tolerance of homosexuality, was signed last week. Phelps-Roper’s lawsuit had sought to declare unconstitutional and bar enforcement of the city of Bellevue's practice of issuing permits to hold protests within city limits.

The church says the settlement demonstrates that responding to public anger by taking action against the church costs taxpayers.

City attorney Michael Polk didn't respond to a message seeking comment for this article.

Phelps-Roper was arrested during a 2007 protest in Bellevue after she and her son allegedly desecrated the U.S. flag.

The settlement was signed the same day that a federal judge, with agreement from Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning, permanently stopped the state’s flag-desecration law from being enforced. The judge and other state officials agreed that the law was unconstitutional.


Related

Kansas woman charged in flag-desecration case files suit (news)
Despite rebuffs from Nebraska Supreme Court and a lower court, Shirley Phelps-Roper presses fight to overturn state law. 01.02.10

Federal court won't hear challenge to Neb. flag-desecration law (news)
But judge lets claims against funeral-protest law proceed, says Shirley Phelps-Roper can raise questions about flag statute's constitutionality during her criminal case in state court. 04.22.10

Neb. officials agree flag-desecration law is unconstitutional (news)
Westboro's Shirley Phelps-Roper still faces charges of child abuse, disturbing the peace related to 2007 protest at soldier's funeral. 07.21.10

Neb. prosecutors, funeral protester reach deal (news)
Authorities agree to dismiss child-abuse, disturbing-the-peace charges in exchange for Shirley Phelps-Roper's pledge to drop federal lawsuit accusing them of malicious prosecution. 08.24.10

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