Institutional Discrimination Against Nonbelievers
Posted: Tue Dec 28, 2010 5:42 pm
Mitch Kahle is in front row, dark shirt. Ponytail.
In April of this year he and Kevin Hughes of the Hawaii Citizens for the Separation of State and Church protested official prayers in the Hawaii state house. During the opening session prayer, Kahle stood up and said he objected to the prayers in the legislature. He calmly sat down, and then Hughes made the same statement and likewise sat down.
Kahle and Hughes were escorted outside by security. Kahle was then tackled and roughed up.
One of the security personnel who beat him used to be a professional boxer.
Kahle and Hughes are suing for false arrest, assault, battery, false imprisonment, and a number of other charges.
See here.
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Mitch Kahle, leader of Hawaii Citizens for the Separation of State and Church, was acquitted of a disorderly charge that stemmed from an arrest at a Hawaii
state senate session in April 2010.
On April 29, 2010, activists Kahle and Kevin Hughes objected to what they considered "unconstitutional Christian prayers" that began each session of the Hawaii legislature. Officials and security quickly arrested Kahle, while Hughes was taken to the hospital after a rough altercation. Although prosecuted, Kahle was ultimately vindicated when Judge Leslie Hayashi found him "no guilty" and ruled that: "The Senate's [Christian] prayers violate the constitutional separation of church and state."
See here. Video of judge's decision at the link.