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SPECIAL THANKS TO LT. GOV. PAT QUINN WHO SPONSORED THIS BILL AND THE
PATRIOT GUARDS FOR THEIR DEDICATION, DEVOTION, AND PATRIOTISM
http://www.patriotguard.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 17, 2006
Gov. Blagojevich signs “Let Them Rest in Peace Act” allowing
families to peacefully grieve fallen soldiers New law makes
protesting within 200 feet of a funeral or memorial service a crime
SPRINGFIELD – Governor Rod R. Blagojevich today signed a new law to
shield grieving military families from protests during funerals and
memorial services of fallen soldiers. Senate Bill 1144, the “Let
Them Rest in Peace Act,” requires protesters to stay at least 200
feet away from family and friends as they mourn soldiers who made
the ultimate sacrifice. The Governor signed the law today after
learning of a potential protest at the upcoming funeral of an
Effingham man who was killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan
earlier this month. Members of the Westboro Baptist Church in
Topeka, Kansas, who have staged numerous disruptive and
disrespectful protests during funerals for fallen soldiers, told
local authorities and state officials they plan to picket
Christopher Donaldson’s services, which will take place on Friday.
“It is unfathomable to me that anyone would stage a protest at a
funeral. How can any decent person think that disturbing a family
grieving the death of any loved one, let alone the death of one of
our soldiers, is acceptable? It’s not, and the law I’m signing today
makes that clear by making protesting within 200 feet of a funeral a
crime in Illinois,” said Governor Blagojevich.
“No grieving military family should be subjected to vile epithets
and disruptive protests at the funeral service of their loved one
who has made the ultimate sacrifice for our country,” said Lt.
Governor Pat Quinn, who has attended every funeral of fallen
Illinois soldiers from the War on Terror in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“The Let Them Rest in Peace Act protects the First Amendment
religious rights of families to bury their dead with reverence and
dignity, and everyone in the Land of Lincoln believes in this
fundamental principle of human decency.”
The “Let Them Rest in Peace Act,” an initiative of Lt. Gov. Quinn
sponsored by Sen. Arthur “A.J.” Wilhelmi (D-Crest Hill) and Rep.
Brandon Phelps (D-Harrisburg), was created in response to a series
of disruptions at funeral services for Illinois military personnel
in the past year, and applies to all funerals and memorial services
in Illinois.
The new law protects grieving family members and friends by putting
a 200-foot privacy zone between the funeral site and protestors who
sing loudly, play music, chant, whistle, yell, or make any other
type of disturbing noise. SB 1144 also prohibits protesters from
displaying any visual images that convey fighting words or threats
against any other person, and makes it illegal to knowingly obstruct
a person’s entry or exit from a funeral site. Disruptive and
inflammatory protests will be prohibited 30 minutes before a
funeral, during a funeral, and 30 minutes after the funeral within
that 200-foot privacy zone.
“It is unfortunate that we have to pass legislation like this, but
it is so important so families can grieve their loved ones in peace,
without the interference of disrespectful protesters,” said Rep.
Phelps. “We all value our right to free speech. But there are
appropriate times and places to protest, and a funeral is not one of
them. This legislation will finally help ensure that recent
disruptive protests during the funerals of some fallen soldiers
won't happen to other families in Illinois.”
“It is our intent with this legislation to protect the rights of
families to grieve peacefully for their loved one who has been
killed fighting to protect our freedom,” Sen. Wilhelmi said. “I’m
happy to have worked with Lt. Governor Pat Quinn on this important
initiative.”
A first time violation of the Act is a Class C misdemeanor,
punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a $1,500 fine and a Class 4
felony for a second or subsequent offense, which is punishable by
one to three years in state prison and a fine of up to $25,000.
The new law is effective immediately.
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