Just caught a snippet of the press conference.
He refused to remove the monument, and is appealing to the Supreme Court. His main point seemed to be that he was entrusted to protect the laws of Alabama, that federal courts undermine the foundation of the country, and that as God was the basis for laws, he will not remove the 10 commandments.
Waiting for a news story and a transcript.
Edited to add the story
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&e=3&u=/ap/20030814/ap_on_re_us/ten_commandments
He refused to remove the monument, and is appealing to the Supreme Court. His main point seemed to be that he was entrusted to protect the laws of Alabama, that federal courts undermine the foundation of the country, and that as God was the basis for laws, he will not remove the 10 commandments.
Waiting for a news story and a transcript.
Edited to add the story
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&e=3&u=/ap/20030814/ap_on_re_us/ten_commandments
The chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court said Thursday he will not remove a Ten Commandments monument from the state judicial building, defying a federal court order to remove the granite monument.
"I have no intention of removing the monument," Roy Moore said at a news conference. "This I cannot and will not do."
Moore said he will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) to stop any removal.
His decision came six days before the Aug. 20 deadline for the 5,300-pound monument to be removed from the building's rotunda, where it is in clear sight of visitors coming in the main entrance.
U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson of Montgomery, who ruled the monument violates the constitution's ban on government promotion of religion, had said fines of about $5,000 a day would have been imposed against the state if the monument were not removed.
......
He said the "acknowledgment of almighty god" is the foundation of the country and its legal system and referred to Alabama's motto: "We Dare Defend Our Rights."
Moore said he would file his first pleading with the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday.
When elected chief justice three years ago, Moore was already known nationally as the "Ten Commandments judge" for his legal fight to keep a hand-carved Ten Commandments display posted on the wall of his courtroom in Gadsden, where he was a circuit judge.
In office as chief justice, he had the gray granite Ten Commandments monument moved into the judicial building in the middle of the night on July 31, 2001, without announcing the event to the public or to the news media. He did inform a Christian television ministry, which filmed the installation and used it on the TV program.
.....
Moore said he had the monument installed because he believes the Ten Commandments to be the moral foundation of American law.
....
Moore had testified during the trial that one reason he became interested in the public display of the Ten Commandments was because of what he called a decline of moral values in America, which he blamed on federal court rulings concerning prayer in school and other issues.
He also contended the federal judge had no authority to tell the state's chief justice to remove the monument.
Moore appealed Thompson's order, but a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously against Moore, saying in part that his argument echoed state's rights claims of segregationists such as Alabama's Gov. George C. Wallace in the 1960s.
.....