
All charges
dropped against pro-life pastor

The Appellate Division of the Alameda Superior Court has dismissed all
criminal charges against Oakland pro-life witness Pastor Walter Hoye.
Hoye was arrested in May of 2008, charged, found guilty and imprisoned
for peacefully counseling and picketing at a local abortion clinic.
He was charged under a 2008 City of Oakland bubble zone ordinance,
which prohibits pro-life protesters outside abortion facilities from
standing within 8 feet of women seeking abortions. His lawyers claimed
the bubble zone ordinance was enacted for the sole purpose of keeping
Hoye away from the Oakland abortuary and was an infringement on his
constitutional right of free speech.
In January 2009, Hoye was found guilty of two counts of unlawfully
approaching women entering an abortion facility, a misdemeanor
enshrined in city law the previous spring.
At the sentencing hearing, Judge Stuart Hing of the Alameda Superior
Court stated that would not impose any fine or jail time on Rev. Hoye
if he would agree to stay away from the abortion facility. Rev. Hoye
refused these terms.
Judge Hing then imposed a 30-day jail sentence, a $1130 fine, and also
ordered him to stay one hundred yards away from the abortion facility
for three years.
In August 2009, an appeal by Hoye to federal court failed when U.S.
District Judge Charles R. Breyer ruled that Oakland's bubble zone
ordinance was constitutional. He said the law protects access to
health care, while also allowing protesters to express their opinion.
At the time, one of Hoye's lawyers, Michael Millen of the Life Legal
Defense Foundation (LLDF), announced his intention to appeal the ruling
to the Ninth Circuit appellate court, and commented on Judge Breyer's
decision.
"It is now illegal to stand still on the sidewalk and extend your arm
to hand out a piece of literature," he said. "I don't think the
Ninth Circuit is going to buy it.”
“Mark this day down," he continued. "On this day, a federal court judge
ruled that it is constitutional to put someone in jail for a year for
holding out a hand with a leaflet."
Three months ago, the appellate court overturned Pastor Hoye’s criminal
conviction for violating Oakland’s law restricting sidewalk counseling.
In its published verdict, the appellate court agreed with Hoye’s
attorneys that the trial court had erred, and granted Hoye a new trial.
The case was remitted back to the trial court on September 24. However,
in the appellate court’s decision, Hoye was to have been brought to
trial within thirty days of that date. When the time lapsed, attorney
Millen asked the court to dismiss the case.
The Alameda County District Attorney’s Office agreed with Millen’s
evaluation of the case and the court promptly ordered all charges
against Hoye dismissed.
“We are pleased that Pastor Hoye is no longer under threat of further
prosecution on these charges,” said Katie Short, Legal Director of the
Life Legal Defense Foundation, in a press release.
Short cautioned, however, that, “This is only one side of the battle.
We now await the Ninth Circuit’s decision on our constitutional
challenge to the ordinance under which he was prosecuted.”
A decision in the federal case is expected in the next few months.
Rev. Hoye told reporters that he is overjoyed at the decision and is
looking forward to resuming his life-saving sidewalk witness at the
Oakland abortuary.
Contact: Thaddeus M. Baklinski
Source: LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date: November
16, 2010
Click
here to return to
the Current Daily News
The IFRL
is the largest
grassroots pro-life organization in
Illinois. A non-profit organization, that serves as the state
coordinating body for local pro-life chapters representing thousands of
Illinois citizens working to restore respect for all human life in our
society. The IFRL is composed of people of different political
persuasions, various faiths and diverse economic, social and ethnic
backgrounds. Since 1973 the Illinois Federation for Right to Life has
been working to end abortion
and restore legal protection to those members of the
human family who are threatened by abortion, infanticide and euthanasia.
Diverse though we are, we hold one common belief - that
every human being has an inalienable right to life
that is precious and must be protected. IFRL is
dedicated to restoring the right to life to the unborn, and protection
for the disabled and the elderly. Click here to learn more about
the IFRL.