Ohio judge can't display 10 Commandments


CINCINNATI (AP) — An Ohio judge violated the U.S. Constitution by displaying a poster containing the Ten Commandments in his courtroom, a federal appeals court ruled today.

A three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a federal district court's ruling that Judge James DeWeese of Richland County Common Pleas Court violated the constitutional separation between church and state by displaying the poster.

Judge DeWeese's attorney, Francis Manion, said he and his client disagree with the ruling and are considering their options. They could ask the full appeals court for a hearing or appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The judge hung the poster in his courtroom in Mansfield, north of Columbus, in 2006 after the U.S. Supreme Court let stand lower-court rulings that another Ten Commandment poster he hung in 2000 violated separation between church and state.

The latest poster titled "Philosophies of Law in Conflict" shows the Ten Commandments in a column listed as "moral absolutes" and secular humanist principles in another column listed as "moral relatives."

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