http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=17164

Church, town force shop owner to ditch 'Geno is God' sign
By The Associated Press
10.26.02
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EAST HARTFORD, Conn. � There was only one problem with Ken Bernacky's
"GENO IS GOD" sign. He put it up across the street from a church.
The church complained, and East Hartford officials demanded that Bernacky
take down the sign he put up in his shop seven months ago in tribute to
Geno Auriemma, the women's basketball coach at the University of
Connecticut.
Bernacky complied with the order on Oct. 24, saying he could not afford
the $25 per day in fines that would have been levied.
Bernacky owns the Stereo Surgeons repair shop on Main Street. He says the
town's order is censorship and violates his right to adore the coach and
the team that won the national championship this year.
"Maybe I do worship someone or something called Geno and he is my God,"
Bernacky told The Hartford Courant.
But members of St. John's Episcopal Church across the street saw the sign
as blasphemy.
Town officials told Bernacky to remove the sign by the close of business
on Oct. 24. They say it violated local zoning regulations because it
celebrated an event that has passed more than 60 days ago � the national
championship.
Auriemma told WTNH-TV that he wasn't what the sign said he was.
"I don't pay too much attention to that stuff," Auriemma said. "I know
how they treat me at my house and trust me, I'm nowhere near anything
anybody says."
Bernacky has posted the sign for the past several years during the NCAA
tournament. He says he has usually taken it down in the summer, but he
left it up longer this year because of the championship.
Shirley Finney, administrator at St. John's, told Bernacky last spring
that she disapproved of his message.
"God is God," Finney said. "God is not Santa Claus and God is not Geno."
But Bernacky kept the sign up.
During Easter, several church members e-mailed the mayor's office saying
the sign was blasphemous, Mayor Timothy Larson said.
But Bernacky kept the sign up.
This month, Larson said he paid a friendly visit to the store and
suggested that the sign come down.
But Bernacky kept the sign up.
So last week a zoning inspector came to have a look and found that it
violated town sign laws. The town sent Bernacky an official order to
remove the sign or face a $25-per-day fine.
Bernacky says the enforcement is arbitrary, pointing out that an
accompanying sign in his shop window that reads "We love UConn women
basketball" is allowed to stay.
Teresa Younger, head of the Connecticut Civil Liberties Union, said the
matter could be an infringement of Bernacky's First Amendment rights.
"It's something that could be debatable," she said.

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