Saturday, May 26

Portland Police Advise iPhone Users Not To Stare, Zombielike, At Their Devices

News Portland police yesterday announced that they'd caught that most elusive brand of criminal, the smar... More

May 25, 2012 12:32 pm by COREY PEIN  | Comments 1
 

Oregonian's Sister Paper To Cease Daily Publication; Updated

News In another sign of the difficult financial realities for print newspapers, the New Orleans Times-Pic... More

May 24, 2012 09:20 am by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 2
 

Oregon Senators Back Bill Aimed At Citizens United

News Speaking of money in politics… U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) is among those speaking on the Senate... More

May 23, 2012 11:08 am by Corey Pein  | Comments 0
 

Schools Miss Out on $40 Million in Energy Savings

News An audit by the State of Oregon has found school districts missed out on $40 million of potential en... More

May 22, 2012 03:10 pm by CODY NEWTON  | Comments 0
 

Phil Knight Also Contributes To Higher Ed PAC

News We're not going to record every donation to the new political action committee called Oregonians for... More

May 22, 2012 08:44 am by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 3
 
 
 
February 15th, 2011 By REBECCA JACOBSON | News | Posted In: Politics, Legislature

Legislation Seeks to Restrict Picketing at Funerals

Westboro_BC_03022010_RichmondVa

Citing concerns over the Kansas-based Westboro Baptist Church and its inflammatory funeral protests, two state representatives have introduced legislation in Oregon to limit picketing outside memorial services.

Introduced by Reps. Jim Weidner (R-Yamhill) and Patrick Sheehan (R-Clackamas), HB 3241 would prohibit picketing within 300 feet of funeral, burial, or other memorial services and within an hour of their beginning or end. Violators could risk up to 30 days imprisonment and a $1,250 fine.

Weidner, who has a son in the military, said such legislation would protect mourners’ privacy. Westboro Baptist Church members have held many protests at soldiers’ funerals, bizarrely claiming the deaths are God’s punishment for American tolerance of homosexuality.

“If someone was to show up at my son’s funeral, it would probably incite me to violence,” Weidner said. “It infiltrates on a person’s private time to mourn over the loss of their loved one. Hitler’s family would have even deserved the time to mourn.”

(Westboro's band of bizarros has showed up in Oregon for other things besides funerals.)

Both Weidner and Sheehan said this bill is based on emergency legislation passed in Arizona after the Westboro Baptist Church threatened to picket the funeral of Christina Green, the nine-year-old victim of the Tucson shooting. Though the Church later decided not to protest, the state still pushed through the ban. At least 40 states have restrictions on funeral protests.

Sheehan said the bill has bipartisan support in Oregon, but anticipates a constitutional challenge in the courts over free speech issues. Legislation in other states has overcome such challenges, and Sheehan hopes the same will happen in Oregon.

“These things (Westboro Baptist Church protests) are completely unrelated to the funeral,” Sheehan said. “They’re just a mechanism for them to get media attention for their hate speech.”

 
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