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Court Hears Motion To Dismiss Genocide Deniers' Case

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  • Court Hears Motion To Dismiss Genocide Deniers' Case

    COURT HEARS MOTION TO DISMISS GENOCIDE DENIERS' CASE

    Public Radio of Armenia
    Sept 19 2006

    In US District Court in Boston on Monday, Assistant Attorney General
    William Porter argued for the dismissal of a lawsuit brought by a
    Turkish group and others seeking to reinsert genocide denial materials
    into the Massachusetts school human rights curriculum guide. In
    support of the Attorney General's position, the Armenian Assembly
    filed an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief, and argued for
    the rights of the defendants to recommend teaching the facts of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    The lawsuit, filed last year by the Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations (ATAA), asserts that the Massachusetts Department of
    Education's decision to remove denialist materials in the school
    curriculum guide amounts to "censoring" and therefore would be
    a violation of the First Amendment. In court, Assistant Attorney
    General Porter, who represented the Commonwealth, argued that the First
    Amendment cannot be applied to statements by the government and said
    that the Statute of Limitation requires that the case be dismissed.

    Furthermore, the state pointed out that the plaintiffs have no
    standing to sue since there was no harm suffered because students and
    teachers may still independently access genocide denial information
    from sources not recommended by the state's curriculum guide.

    "If the plaintiffs succeed with this lawsuit, there will be no stopping
    point for the demands anyone can make for the inclusion in curriculum
    recommendations, no matter how flawed or outrageous," said Attorney
    Arnie Rosenfeld of Kirkpatrick and Lockhart Nicholson Graham LLP,
    who argued the Armenian Assembly's Amicus together with Board of
    Trustees Counselor Van Krikorian.

    Rosenfeld and Krikorian warned that if the court accepts the
    plaintiffs' First Amendment claims, it would open the door for any
    extremist group, such as Holocaust deniers, to challenge curriculum
    matters in court.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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