From Deseret News archives:

Fringe sect's lawsuit delays monument to fallen WWII soldiers

Published: Wednesday, May 7, 2008 3:50 p.m. MDT
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"Throughout the years, city, state, and local governments across the country erected monuments containing the Ten Commandments," the site says. "They allowed certain people to take advantage of a situation to promote their point of view."

In 2005, Summum sued and won a free-speech lawsuit against the city of Pleasant Grove, Utah, after officials there rejected placing the group's monument in a city park.

Pleasant Grove appealed the ruling, arguing that the Summum monument does not meet the requirement that displays in the park must be historical. The appeals court disagreed, finding that Pleasant Grove had to erect Summum's monument because the city park is a public forum that already contained a donated Ten Commandments marker, according to court records.

As a result, the court found, Pleasant Grove must accept other markers donated by private parties for permanent display. Pleasant Grove appealed and, on March 31, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to put the case on its docket.

And that's the snag for the Army, which has put in limbo any decisions about donated markers, such as the one for the Bakers Creek plane crash. Families of the soldiers, two World War II veterans' organizations, retired military members and citizens of Queensland, Australia contributed money for the monument.

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"Due to the ramifications that this case may have on the Army's acceptance of the Bakers Creek Memorial or any other monument funded by private funds, the Army will await the Supreme Court's decision to assess its options," Keith Eastin, Army assistant secretary for installations and environment, wrote in the April 29 report to federal lawmakers.

The Army has already rejected advocates' first choice of Arlington National Cemetery as the permanent home for the monument, citing concerns about dwindling space and legal requirements. Advocates for those killed in the crash said they would probably be satisfied if the monument were placed at nearby Fort Myer.

The Army says it regrets the delay.

"There were a lot of people in the Army working to get this memorial in place for this year's anniversary, and we are disappointed in the delay," Col. Russell Santala, Eastin's executive officer, said.

The Army recommendation was due April 1 but the service requested more time. The latest delay also did not sit well with an advocate for the families.

"We believe the 40 casualty families deserve more respect from the Army than to fob it off to some undecided court case, not even involved with Army or federal government land," Cutler said.

For now, the Bakers Creek memorial sits on foreign soil at the Australian Embassy in Washington, awaiting the eventual Army report.

Cutler proposed a solution.

"If the Army really wants to do the right thing here, perhaps they might consider issuing a $1 purchase order for the monument, thus avoiding the donation problem entirely," he said.


E-mail: Scripps Howard News Service Washington regional correspondent Trish Choate at choatet(at)shns.com.

Recent comments

I wish they would have described the proposed military monument. I'm...

Dr. Cletus | May 13, 2008 at 8:12 p.m.

Clearly, the majority should rule in all religious affairs. That's...

Definately | May 8, 2008 at 11:25 a.m.

This whole issue, plus the Summum sham driving it, is really about...

Reasonable Realist | May 7, 2008 at 8:49 p.m.

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