Dallas, TX – Jewish Lawyer Sues Group Saying They Prayed For His Death

    16

    Mikey WeinsteinDallas, TX – A former military lawyer who served in the Reagan White House and worked for Ross Perot is suing a Dallas-based religious organization in a case that could test the limits of free speech and prayer.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    Mikey Weinstein, founder of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, said he wants Gordon Klingenschmitt, a former U.S. Navy chaplain, to “stop asking Jesus to plunder my fields … seize my assets, kill me and my family then wipe away our descendants for 10 generations.”

    The suit also asks the court to stop the defendants – Klingenschmitt and Jim Ammerman, the founder of the Dallas-based Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches – from “encouraging, soliciting, directing, abetting or attempting to induce others to engage in similar conduct.”

    Weinstein, 54, said his family has received death threats, had a swastika emblazoned on their home in New Mexico, animal carcasses left on their doorstep and feces thrown at the house.

    Weinstein, who is Jewish, said the harassment started several years ago when he began protesting Christian proselytizing at his alma mater, the Air Force Academy. Weinstein started his foundation shortly after that to battle the influence of extremist evangelical Christians in the armed forces.

    “I morphed from being a lawyer and a businessman to this thing called a civil rights activist,” he says. He is an unlikely activist, Weinstein said: a Jewish Republican from a long line of military members.

    Klingenschmitt, 41, said in a phone interview that he has “never incited anybody” to hurt Weinstein.

    “I never prayed for anyone’s death,” he said. “I never prayed for anyone’s violence. All I did was quote the Scriptures.” His prayers are available on his Web site and for radio broadcast.

    Ammerman, an 84-year-old retired Army chaplain, declined an interview, but said in a prepared statement he “believes the allegations are unfounded.”

    Weinstein said he also hopes to cripple the Chaplaincy financially and to have the organization stripped of its status with the Department of Defense.

    Military chaplains

    The Chaplaincy has been an endorsing or approving agency for military chaplains since 1984. Religious denominations generally endorse chaplains from their own churches, but the Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches represents independent churches that may not be affiliated with a denomination.

    The Chaplaincy’s Web site says it represents 7.5 million “Full Gospel, Spirit-filled believers” from more than 225 fellowships or associations and 1,325 churches.

    The Chaplaincy says it has endorsed more than 270 military chaplains.

    “The suit raises numerous free speech and religious freedom issues,” Ammerman said in his statement, adding that it “incorrectly implies that endorsing agencies exercise control over those they endorse, including their independent actions and speech.”

    Klingenschmitt was endorsed by the Chaplaincy several years ago.

    According to religious law expert Douglas Laycock of the University of Michigan, “imprecatory,” or curse prayers, are considered by the courts to be protected speech. “People can pray for whatever they want to pray for,” he said.

    But the question of whether such speech can be used to incite others to violence has not been settled by the courts in a religious context.

    Weinstein’s attorney, Randal Mathis, said their biggest concern is that Klingenschmitt’s audience includes a “certain number of unstable people” who might act in the name of God.

    “A threat is a threat and a call to violence is a call to violence,” he said. “And those are not constitutionally protected.”

    Weinstein and the Foundation have protested issues such as soldiers pressured to attend religious events; distribution of Bibles by soldiers in Muslim countries; and the display of religious symbols on military equipment.

    The lawsuit says the Chaplaincy is not a religious organization but “a front for anti-government extremists.”

    “Ammerman has made his position quite clear, in publicly available speeches and articles,” the lawsuit says. “He believes that the United States government is planning to turn over sovereignty to the United Nations … he believes that our highest government officials are traitors.”

    But Ammerman stops short of advocating anti-government violence in his speeches, the lawsuit says. “He whips his crowd into a frenzy and then nods and smiles while members of the audience make the actual threats of violence,” the suit says.

    The number and intensity of threats against him increased earlier this year, Weinstein said, after Klingenschmitt, whom the suit calls a “henchman” for Ammerman, offered several “imprecatory prayers” based on Psalm 109 and Deuteronomy 23.

    Klingenschmitt called the lawsuit a publicity stunt and Weinstein a “paranoid megalomaniac who has a history of anti-Christian persecution.”

    He “would never pray evil upon my enemies,” he said, “but the justice of God is not evil.”

    Does he want Mikey Weinstein to die? “I pray the Psalm that his days are few,” he replied.

    Klingenschmitt left the Navy with an honorable discharge after being found guilty in a 2006 court-martial for disobeying an order not to wear his uniform at a news conference. He said he ministered to Christians and non-Christians alike but said he sees “the whole world as a mission field,” including the military.

    ‘Mission field’

    Weinstein said he is not opposed to chaplains in the military, as long as they minister to all faiths, but he said the military should not be a “mission field” for chaplains to proselytize for their particular beliefs.

    Weinstein says, “The fight we’re fighting is not a Christian-Jewish fight, it’s not a Christian-Islamic fight,” noting that most of his Foundation’s 15,000 clients are Christians. “It’s not a political spectrum left or right matter. This is a constitutional right and wrong matter.

    “You cannot use your position of military authority to force the Afghans, Iraqis or people underneath you in the military to accept your specific religion,” he said. “If the Jews were doing it or the mainstream Protestants or Catholics or Buddhists or Hindus, we’d be in their face.”

    Klingenschmitt said he may file a countersuit because Weinstein once said he “would like to beat the expletive out of him in a boxing ring or in an alley.”

    Weinstein, who boxed at the Air Force Academy, didn’t dispute the quote, saying he has offered to meet Klingenschmitt for a “fair fight.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    16 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    joe
    joe
    14 years ago

    its sad that the Army allows these nuts to be chaplains but won’t allow chabad rabbi’s because they have beards

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    When a prayer ls likely to lead to violence, especially when it explictitly seeks god’s intrercession for violent outcomes, and there is some evidence, albeit anecdotal that people are acting on such incitement, there is no longer a first amendment issue and the courts should step in. We have seen the outcome recently in kansas where a Wichita physician was murdered because he peformed abortions. His murderer claims to have been influenced by religious websites.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    i thought that religious jews COULD wear beards and side curls if they are strict orthodox jews (in the military). perhaps the job is limited to those where it is permitted. is this true? I know for sure from my breif time in the military that people did wear kippahs. (I saw one person who wore a kippah once). what is the consensus now? Can you wear tzitzit? if so can you wear them out or must you wear them tucked in? just curious.

    A. Nuran
    A. Nuran
    14 years ago

    Not even close, Milhouse.

    There have always been limits to First Amendment protections to speech. Incitement to violence has always been outside the boundaries. Intention is always tricky to prove, but courts have ruled in the past that if the speech could be reasonably expected to incite listeners to violence it is not protected.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    What a dumb lawsuit. And this lawyer should only know what the people are praying for now!!

    Dave
    Dave
    14 years ago

    If they think the prayer will result in his death, then they are, as far as I know, open to attempted murder charges.

    If I recall correctly, this is settled law. Using Voodoun to attempt to cause someone’s death is a crime, whether or not it would ever have any efficacy. Mind you, this is from a college course 20+ years ago, and I am not a lawyer.

    Reb Yid
    Reb Yid
    14 years ago

    What does it mean that they were praying to wipe out his descendants for 10 generations? Once you wipe out the living descendants, doesn’t that mean there aren’t any future generations?

    awacs
    awacs
    14 years ago

    Jake Goldstein is a Chabad chaplain with a beard. So is Shmuel Felzenberg.