MONTGOMERY, Ala. (ABP) — Following in the footsteps of deposed Alabama Supreme Court head Roy Moore, another judge in that state has raised controversy with a public tribute to the Ten Commandments — this time on the judge's robe.
Covington County Circuit Judge Ashley McKathan began wearing a judicial robe embroidered with a golden-lettered version of the Ten Commandments Dec. 13, according to news reports. Attorneys who practice in his Andalusia courtroom have objected to the display and asked for continuations of their cases because of it. But McKathan has reportedly denied those requests.
One of the attorneys, Riley Powell, said he objected because the display is a distraction. “I was representing an airline pilot who was accused of driving under the influence,” he said, according to the Mobile Register. “It's not that I am anti-Christian in the least. In fact, on a personal level, I respect what Judge McKathan is doing very much.
“It's just the robe has created a great distraction in the courtroom with media present and cameras. And when the judge wears his personal views on his chest, does that influence the jury?” Powell asked. “Does it send a signal or change what a juror's own beliefs might be? My client is entitled to a trial without that distraction or those issues.”
Last year, an Alabama judicial-ethics panel forced Roy Moore out of his job as the state's chief justice for violating ethical guidelines. Earlier in the year, Moore defied a federal court's order to remove a massive granite monument to the Ten Commandments that he had installed in the rotunda of the state's judicial headquarters building in Montgomery.
Moore, too, had been an obscure circuit judge before rising to prominence for displaying a smaller hand-carved tribute to the Decalogue in his Etowah County courtroom. He won election as the state's chief justice, calling himself the “Ten Commandments Judge.”
McKathan, who like Moore is a Baptist, offered a view of the commandments' relationship to the law very similar to the one that Moore offered in defending his display. “I see the Ten Commandments as a connection to the truth,” he told the Register. “The scriptural truth is the underlying foundation for the law. It has sustained Western civilization for centuries. Without the truth, you can throw the law.”
Moore released a statement Dec. 14 praising McKathan. “The recognition of the God who gave us the Ten Commandments is fundamental to an understanding of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution,” Moore said. “I applaud Judge McKathan. It is time for our judiciary to recognize the moral basis of our law.”
But the Montgomery Advertiser, in a Dec. 16 editorial, decried McKathan's tactics.
“As in Moore's case, the issue here is not the merits of the Ten Commandments,” the newspaper said. “The issue is the glaring impropriety of a judge, presiding in a system dedicated to fair and impartial treatment under the laws of the state and nation of all who face charges before it, injecting a set of religious beliefs into that system. It's not about the Ten Commandments; the issue would be the same if McKathan's embroidered words were those of the Koran or the scriptures of any faith.”
The editorial concluded: “Has nothing been learned from the Moore case?”