Homosexual
activists accused of 'domestic terrorism'
Since
11-17-08
Paul Foy - Associated Press Writer - 11/15/2008
http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=321402
SALT LAKE CITY - The Mormon church on Friday blamed opponents of California's homosexual marriage ban for sending hoax mailings containing white powder to temples, while a group that also supported the measure condemned "acts of domestic terrorism against our supporters."
The letters were sent to the Salt Lake City headquarters of the church,
where powder spilled on a mail clerk's hand, and to a temple in Los Angeles.
Both packages tested nontoxic, the FBI said Friday.
The two temples were sites of recent protests against the church's support
for a California ballot initiative that superseded a court decision allowing
gay marriage. The Mormon church, whose official name is the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, said it is stepping up security.
"We call upon those who have honest disagreements on this issue to urge
restraint upon the extreme actions of a few," church President Thomas S.
Monson said in a statement.
The Utah Pride Center, a gay rights group, put out its own statement calling
the powder hoaxes and acts of vandalism "deplorable."
However, the group said, "It is false to conclude that yesterday's
suspicious package came from gay protesters. Overwhelmingly, gay and allied
Utahns have expressed their pain, frustration and commitment to securing
rights through peaceful demonstrations and marches."
The coalition that ran the campaign to defeat Proposition 8 also issued a
condemnation Friday.
"The NO on 8 campaign was about civil rights and seeking equality for all
Californians. We have said time and again that the Mormon church deserves
the same respect as any other religion," said Ali Bay, a spokeswoman for
Equality California, the state's largest gay rights group.
The FBI is still investigating both cases, spokesman Juan T. Becerra said,
noting that it's a crime to release a substance to threaten harm and stoke
public fear.
"Even if you send a hoax threat, you're still in violation of federal law,"
Becerra said.
Anthrax mailed as a white powder to lawmakers and media members killed five
people and sickened 17 in 2001. Since then, hoaxes modeled on the anthrax
mailings have popped up but usually turn out to be harmless.
Separately, the coalition of religious groups behind the successful measure
held a news conference to denounce protests carried out since Election Day.
The backlash has included calls for a boycott of Utah ski resorts and
California businesses whose owners donated to the cause.
"Our opponents do not like the outcome and that is to be respected. They
fought hard and they feel defeated and that is understandable," said Frank
Schubert, co-manager of the Yes on 8 campaign. "What they do not have the
right to do, however, is to harass and intimidate people. And they do not
have the right to commit acts of domestic terrorism against our supporters."
Meanwhile, five civil rights groups asked California's highest court Friday
to annul the ban on the grounds that Proposition 8 threatens the legal
standing of all minority groups, not just gays.
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the Mexican-American Legal
Defense Fund, the Asian Pacific American Legal Center and two other groups
petitioned the state Supreme Court to prevent the change from taking effect.
The petition is the fourth seeking to have the measure invalidated. But it's
the first to argue that the court should step in because the gay marriage
ban, which overturned the Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay unions,
sets a precedent that could be used to undermine the rights of racial
minorities.
Eva Paterson, president of the San Francisco-based Equal Justice Society,
said the election raises the specter of voters deciding to bar illegal
immigrants from public schools, disenfranchising black voters or otherwise
using the ballot box to promote segregation.
"The court ruled that to discriminate in the area of same-sex marriage was
unconstitutional and violated our guaranteed equality," Paterson said. "Why
should a slim majority of Californians be able to put discrimination back
into the California Constitution?"