Bash Back! resolved

A case involving a 2008 protest by ‘radical queer’ activists at a Delta Township church comes to an end

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Gay rights activists who gained national attention when they disrupted Sunday morning services at Mount Hope Church in 2008 have reached an agreement that has ended the church’s suit against them.

The agreement bans 13 of the protesters from entering the church, 202 S. Creyts Road in Delta Township, without permission and  requires them to pay a total of $2,750 in damages. The church is also known as the Church of the Flags.

The agreement also blocks the 13 protesters from conducting similar demonstrations at any other church. One of the defendants said the agreement is “not terrible” and that he’s “feeling OK” about it because of the relatively inexpensive damages and the agreement’s First Amendment protections.

“We went ahead and agreed to that, which is actually not terrible,” said the defendant, Andy Field, former president of the Lansing chapter of Bash Back!, which staged the demonstration. “We (the 13 individuals) agreed to not go on the property of Mount Hope Church or any of its facilities.

“Another reason we agreed is that this is just an injunction on certain individuals and not everyone,” he said.

The defendants besides Field are: Anton Bollen, Wendie Debnar, Spencer Dilday, Nathan Keller, Melissa Kim, Samuel Kreuger, Ryan Levitt, Cailin Major, Devin Merget, Kelsey Myking, Ryan Pennings and Tyler Troutman.

Three other defendants were dismissed entirely from the suit, according to Mark Sniderman, an attorney for Bash Back! They are Daniel Regenscheit, Gina Wertz and Kristy Bousquet, he said.

Bash Back! targeted Mount Hope Church because of its homophobic teachings and their effect on young people in the congregation, some of the protesters said at the time.

The original suit filed by Mount Hope Church alleged the protesters and Bash Back! violated the federal Freedom of Access to Clinics Entrances Act. The act largely addresses access to abortion clinics. Field said if it had gone to trial and Bash Back! eventually lost, it could have blocked future protests at churches.

“It would have legitimized Mount Hope saying we broke the law. We were really concerned that losing in court was going to make it harder for people to protest on a national level,” Field said.

A separate default judgment was issued against Bash Back! nationally and its Lansing chapter because the groups did not submit contact information for the court. However, this is because Bash Back! — in Lansing and nationally — no longer exists. “There is no Bash Back! anymore,” Field said, citing “internal politics.”

Dale Schowengerdt, an attorney for the Arizona-based Alliance Defense Fund, which represented the church, could not be reached for comment. A church spokeswoman directed questions to the defense fund, a conservative Christian firm.

The defense fund’s website says it’s “dedicated to preserving and reclaiming religious freedom” with “when necessary, direct litigation through our in-house team of Christ-centered attorneys.”

The permanent injunction issued by U.S. Federal District Court Judge Robert Holmes Bell on July 11 in a Western District court in Grand Rapids includes seven provisions that prevents those 13 from the entering the church without permission by banning them from: “disrupting a religious service anywhere in the United States by shouting, yelling, throwing objects, unfurling a banner or displaying any other sign not approved by the church, or by otherwise causing a disturbance;” “conducting a protest on the private property of any place of worship in the United States;” “blocking, impeding, or making unreasonably difficult ingress or egress to entrances and/or exits of any place of worship in the Unites States;” “destroying property at any place of worship in the United States;” and $2,750 in damages.

The agreement also states: “The Defendants shall retain their right to engage in lawful First Amendment speech in a public forum.”

Sniderman, an Indianapolis-based attorney who took on the case last fall after Bash Back!’s former attorney, Tracie Dominique Palmer, left the case for a job in the court system, said the agreement was “months in the works.”

“My clients were engaged in activity that was protected by the First Amendment,” he said. “I think we were right on the facts and right on the law but going to trial is a risky proposition. If we had lost it would have been disastrous consequences. Given the costs and uncertainty with trial, this was a good outcome.”

Sniderman said most of the provisions of the injunction are “illegal anyway” and that retaining the right to “engage in lawful First Amendment speech in a public forum” is “an important one.”

On Nov. 9, 2008, a City Pulse reporter accompanied protesters to the church but did not enter. Once the 11:30 a.m. service began, some protesters interrupted the service while others held signs outside. The Rev. John Elieff of Mount Hope said at the time that protesters threw fliers, hung a banner from the balcony and pulled a fire alarm. The event received national coverage plus a segment on Bill O’Reilly’s  Fox News TV show “The O‘Reilly Factor.”

Field said the potential legal expenses and defense fund’s pursuit of e-mail records started adding up. (City Pulse e-mails were also subpoenaed. The paper fought their release until a federal magistrate ordered them to be turned over to him. The magistrate sealed the e-mails but gave the church those that he thought were relevant to the case. The district in which the case was heard does not recognize a privilege allowing the media to protect information from disclosure. Moreover, confidential information from sources was not at risk in the case, Berl Schwartz, editor and publisher of City Pulse, said.)

“It was getting so outrageous that it just made more sense to go ahead and settle as quickly as possible,” Field said. “Of course we went into it expecting to win but it became too big of a situation. They had too much money. It’s hard to go up against millionaires.” 

Field said his days of protesting and organizing for gay and transgender rights are far from over.

“I’m sure there’s plenty of chances for me to exercise my First Amendment rights in the future,” he said.

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