Marine’s dad vows to defy Westboro church on court costs, lawyer says

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WASHINGTON — The father of a Marine killed in Iraq won’t pay the nearly $100,000 in court costs charged by Westboro Baptist Church, which picketed his son’s 2006 funeral, in the wake of his unsuccessful lawsuit against the group, his lawyer said.

“We’re not just going to write them a check,” Sean Summers, lawyer for Albert Snyder, said Friday. “We’re going to make them work for it.”

The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 last week that Westboro’s anti-gay protests were speech protected under the First Amendment. The decision upheld the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision to deny Snyder’s suit against the anti-gay church’s founder, Fred Phelps.

Snyder’s son, Marine Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder,
was not gay, but the church pickets military funerals nationwide
because they say soldiers’ deaths are God’s vengeance for the country’s
tolerance of homosexuality.

A lower court awarded Albert Snyder $5 million in damages for emotional distress. However, at the Supreme Court, all the justices except Samuel Alito sided with Westboro, which means Snyder may be on the hook for the church’s court costs.

Westboro member and lead lawyer Margie Phelps said it was nobody’s business whether the church used the money to finance more funeral protests.

“He intended to shut us down and he announced that far and wide,” she said. “And the Pentagon
backed him up on it. That was their plan. And now they’re going to
finance some of it, that’s how they see it. It’s a beautiful, poetic
thing.”

The 4th Circuit has already ordered Snyder to pay Westboro $16,510.80. Fox News commentator Bill O’Reilly has offered to pick up that cost. Phelps said she would be willing to
“barter” with O’Reilly for airtime on his show, “The O’Reilly Factor,”
instead.

Fox News responded by saying that O’Reilly’s offer to Snyder still stands, but he won’t trade airtime on his show.

The church has another request pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, where the Snyder case began, for a total of $96,740.21, which court documents say “includes and encompasses the $16,510.80 taxed by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals.”

The $96,740.21 request was filed May 6, 2010. Judge Richard D. Bennett has not ruled on it yet. Phelps said if Bennett tries to “sit on it,”
she will go back to the appeals court and force him to rule on it.

“He’s a Reserve major (in the U.S. Army),” she said. “It doesn’t take rocket surgery to figure out why he’s hostile.”

Requests for reimbursement of legal fees are not unusual, but this one has been contentious. Summers and his partner Craig Trebilcock objected to the $16,510.80
request, writing in court briefs that the Phelpses were only in court
because they were “determined to protest the funeral of Appellee’s son
in order to publicize themselves.”

They also said Westboro attorneys printed frivolous documents and their 50-cents-per-page rate was unreasonable for in-house printing.

Even if Bennett orders Snyder to pay the $96,740.21, Summers said that won’t be the end of it.

“The judge can order Mr. Snyder to pay $100,000,” he said. “But I’m telling you right now, Mr. Snyder doesn’t have $100,000.”

Snyder’s lawyers are representing him pro bono, and in court documents he has stated that his salary at the Pennsylvania electric company where he works is “less than $43,000 annually.”

Maxwell Chibundu, a University of Maryland
law professor specializing in civil litigation, said if Snyder refused
to pay, the Phelpses would have to bring a lawsuit to try to garnishee
his wages or put a lien on his house.

“You can’t throw someone into jail for not paying
the judgment,” Chibundu said. “But if you can find assets belonging to
that person, using the laws of the place where the assets happen to be,
you can seek to attach and levy on those assets.”

In court documents filed May 6, 2010, Westboro members Shirley Phelps-Roper and Rebekah A. Phelps-Davis and their Maryland attorney, Jon Katz,
argued that Snyder has not proven an inability to pay, which is his
burden under the law. They also wrote that “various and sundry people
nationwide are raising funds for plaintiff; he is silent on that
well-published fact.”

Snyder is accepting donations on his son’s tribute
website, matthewsnyder.org, and this week there was a new posting on
the site titled “Al Snyder Needs Your Help — Please Consider Donating.”
The posting mentions Westboro’s bill and says, “This fight is not yet
over” and, “All funds donated will go to cover the costs associated
with this case and to support other legal efforts to curtail protests
at military funerals.”

In response to the Phelps’ protests, Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md.,
announced Tuesday that he will introduce a bill to bar picketers from
coming within 2,500 feet of a military funeral or from picketing within
five hours of the start or end of the funeral. Snyder thanked
Ruppersberger for the bill, the “Safe Haven for Heroes Act.”

Westboro has challenged similar laws in court and
Phelps said last week the church would redouble its efforts to overturn
restrictions on picketing at funerals given the Supreme Court’s ruling.

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(c) 2011, Capital News Service.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.