W.Va. City Council Ordered To Stop Reciting The Lord's Prayer

A West Virginia city was ordered Tuesday to stop opening its council meetings with The Lord’s Prayer.

A West Virginia city was ordered Tuesday to stop opening its council meetings with The Lord’s Prayer.

U.S. District Judge John T. Copenhaver Jr. ruled that Parkersburg City Council’s practice of opening its meetings with the New Testament prayer violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits government from favoring one religion over others.

The judge issued a permanent injunction against the prayer recital and awarded $1 in damages to each plaintiff.

Copenhaver ruled in a lawsuit filed by the Freedom from Religion Foundation. The Madison, Wisconsin-based group and two of its members sued the city in 2018.

The judge issued a permanent injunction against the prayer recital and awarded $1 in damages to each plaintiff.

The lawsuit said residents stood at each Parkersburg City Council meeting to recite the prayer with council members. Plaintiffs Daryl Cobranchi and Eric Engle of Parkersburg attended some meetings, remained seated and did not participate in the prayer’s recital.

Attorney General: At Least Six County Commissions Start Meetings with Prayer

According to a recently conducted survey by Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, at least six of 55 county commissions in West Virginia start their meetings…

  According to a recently conducted survey by Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, at least six of 55 county commissions in West Virginia start their meetings with a prayer.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reported Tuesday that Jackson, Mineral, Pleasants, Ritchie and Tyler county commissioners say a prayer at meetings, while the Berkeley County Commission opens its meetings with a prayer by a clergy member or commissioner.

The Republican, who favors prayers at meetings, filed the information in a legal brief for a case headed to the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. In May, a federal judge ruled to halt the prayer practice at the Rowan County Commission in North Carolina.

According to the legal brief, Morrisey’s office was unable to secure information about prayer practices from 21 of West Virginia’s 55 county commissions.

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