May Christians Preach Outside a Philadelphia Mosque?

by David J. Rusin
American Thinker
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/05/may_christians_preach_outside.html> 
May 1, 2011

Law enforcement scrutiny, detainment by police, and a court date to answer
trumped-up charges: these are the consequences of preaching Christianity to
Muslims not only throughout much of
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2009/07/malaysian-police-arrests-christians-for-t
rying-to-convert-muslims-later-frees-them----it-was-all-a-m.html>  the
Islamic
<http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2010/0311/Christian-aid-worker-p
urge-Morocco-orders-dozens-in-five-cities-to-be-deported>  world
<http://globalnation.inquirer.net/news/breakingnews/view/20101006-296336/Sau
dis-arrest-Filipino-Catholics-at-massreport> , but sometimes even in America
<http://www.islamist-watch.org/blog/2010/09/trend-christians-preach-to-musli
ms-get-arrested>  as well.

The most infamous example occurred last June, when four missionaries from
Acts 17 Apologetics <http://www.acts17.net/>  were arrested and charged
<http://michiganmessenger.com/39903/dearborn-police-accused-of-violating-fir
st-amendment>  with breach of peace while they calmly discussed their faith
with Muslims at the Arab International Festival in Dearborn, Michigan. Armed
with self-recorded video
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2010/07/dearborn-mayor-lies-about-christians-arre
sted-for-proselytizing.html>  showing that they had acted in a civil
fashion, the Christians were vindicated
<http://www.mlive.com/news/detroit/index.ssf/2010/09/jury_finds_christian_mi
ssionar.html>  by a jury several months later.

An important but virtually unnoticed Philadelphia case
<http://dailypennsylvanian.com/article/preachers-take-u-court>  from 2010
bears striking similarities to the one in Dearborn, including police
shutting down religious speech directed toward Muslims and a prosecutor
filing charges patently at odds with video evidence. Islamist Watch
<http://www.islamist-watch.org/>  attended the trial, which offered a unique
window into the battle to protect First Amendment rights in an era of
hypersensitivity.

On the evening of July 3, Michael Marcavage of Repent America
<http://www.repentamerica.com/>  - a Philadelphia Christian group known for
its strong stances on hot-button social issues such as abortion and
homosexuality - was driving with two visitors, Kenneth Fleck and Mike
Stockwell. The men say that they spotted Masjid
<http://www.masjid-aljamia.org/>  Al-Jamia

, a fortress-like mosque
<http://ih.constantcontact.com/fs005/1102142477002/img/77.jpg?a=110391050251
7>  located near the University of Pennsylvania campus in West Philadelphia,
and spontaneously decided to pull over and preach on the public sidewalk out
front.

This much was not in dispute: They began with a hymn and took turns reading
Gospel passages. However, a bicycle-bound guard working for AlliedBarton, a
private security firm contracted to patrol the streets close to campus, soon
approached the evangelists, who by then had drawn a boisterous crowd of a
dozen or more Muslims, some visibly upset with the call to Christianity.

According to Marcavage and his cohorts, the guard told them that they could
not preach there and had to depart. They refused, prompting him to radio for
the university police. Officers arrived and found the Christians continuing
to preach, the Muslims arguing with them, and Marcavage filming - which, the
missionaries later explained, had been done to protect themselves against
false accusations, a tactic employed wisely in Dearborn. A policeman asked
the evangelists to step back from the crowd and lower their voices, while
Officer Nicole Michel demanded that Marcavage put down the camera, allegedly
grabbing him by the arm.

When the dust settled, Marcavage and Fleck were in custody facing two
counts: one for "creat[ing] a hazardous or physically offensive condition by
any act which serves no legitimate purpose of the actor," under the state's
disorderly conduct statute
<http://law.onecle.com/pennsylvania/crimes-and-offenses/00.055.003.000.html>
, and another for "obstructing highways and other public passages
<http://law.onecle.com/pennsylvania/crimes-and-offenses/00.055.007.000.html>
," namely a mosque door opening out onto the sidewalk. The men pleaded not
guilty
<http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs005/1102142477002/archive/110354483008
0.html> . Stockwell was neither arrested nor charged.

Defense attorney C. Scott Shields invoked the First Amendment throughout the
four-hour trial of November 12, which did not involve a jury. He began by
petitioning for dismissal on the basis that federal and Pennsylvania courts
regularly have backed the right to express controversial views in public
spaces - and a sidewalk in an urban area like West Philadelphia, he said, is
the "quintessential public forum." Citing Terminiello
<http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=337&invol=1>
v. Chicago

, Shields noted that police cannot enforce a "heckler's veto
<http://books.google.com/books?id=M5rrJjT0t08C&pg=PA348&lpg=PA348> " by
suppressing speech that sparks anger and unrest. Judge Charles Hayden
rejected the motion and ordered testimony to commence on the two charges,
each of which would be exposed as paper thin.

The assertion that Marcavage and Fleck had blocked a mosque door was the
first to fall apart. Amid conflicting eyewitness accounts of their position
on the 15-foot-wide sidewalk (see a Google Street View panorama here
<http://maps.google.com/maps?layer=c&sll=39.954880,-75.208761&cbp=13,157.92,
,0,-0.86&cbll=39.954816,-75.208233&hl=en&gl=us&sspn=0.006295,0.006295&ie=UTF
8> ), including multiple claims that they had stood just two feet from a
door, the defense unveiled its coup de grace: video subpoenaed from the
masjid's surveillance camera showing that the men had stayed closer to the
curb than the building. As Fleck mentioned later, blocking an entrance would
have been counterproductive because the preachers had wanted Muslims to come
out and hear their message. At the trial's conclusion, Assistant District
Attorney Joseph McCool withdrew the charge of obstructing a public passage,
presumably due to the accusation having been rendered untenable.

His attempt to prove disorderly conduct did not fare much better, even
though the judge allowed the charges to be expanded midway through the
proceedings to include two other subsections of the statute
<http://law.onecle.com/pennsylvania/crimes-and-offenses/00.055.003.000.html>
: "engag[ing] in fighting or threatening, or in violent or tumultuous
behavior" and "mak[ing] unreasonable noise."

The case grew weaker with each witness. Nobody had seen the preachers behave
violently or make any threats. Officer Michel, who was quite hostile on the
stand, even admitted that the Christians had been detained, in part, for
their own safety. Asked whether they had created a hazard by disrupting
traffic on busy Walnut Street, her partner explained that the flow of cars
had indeed been affected - but by agitated Muslims running across the road.
Furthermore, no evidence was presented to demonstrate excessive noise.

Two Muslims testified. A young man, the sole mosque attendee called by the
prosecutor, claimed that the evangelists had stirred up the crowd by
describing Islam as a "hate religion," but a female witness contradicted
him, revealing that she had heard only statements such as "Jesus is the
way." The defense called a Muslim of its own, a man responsible for security
at the mosque that evening. Having exited the building while the Christians
were outside, he saw no reason to take any action and continued on to a
nearby store.

The trial's most unsettling twist came when Stockwell, the third minister,
testified to overhearing Officer Michel express concern about Marcavage's
footage, with the implication being that it might undermine the police
account and exonerate the preachers. The defense then attempted to enter
into evidence the video returned to the men upon their release, which they
insisted university police officers had tried to erase by recording over it
with the lens cap on. The judge refused, ruling that the prosecution had not
had sufficient opportunity for review.

The defense did not need it, however, given the preponderance of reasonable
doubt already accumulated. Judge Hayden acquitted the men of the remaining
charges.

"This case was all about Marcavage and Fleck's speech," defense attorney
Shields said
<http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs005/1102142477002/archive/110391050251
7.html>  afterward. "If they had been outside of the mosque talking about
anything other than Jesus Christ, they would never have been arrested."
Indeed, based on the actions of security officers, the prosecutor's decision
to go to trial with flimsy evidence, and his courtroom focus on how Muslims
were aggravated by the Christians' message, it is no great leap to suspect
that deference to Islamic sensibilities helped shape the saga from beginning
to end.

Who ultimately benefited from this needless episode? Islamists pushing the
media-enabled calumny that Philadelphia Muslims are besieged by
discrimination.

Preying on the contemporaneous public debate about the proposed mosque
<http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/man_burns_koran_pages_near_ground_8s6OKc
RfcnZ0Ztz9y07ZoL>  near Ground Zero, the local chapter of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6176> ) appears
to have convinced at least one Philadelphia news outlet, CBS 3 television,
that the above incident was another manifestation of "Islamophobia." In a
segment <http://www.youtube.com/cairphila#p/u/19/zLBtGdcX1bQ>  from early
September, now featured on the CAIR-PA YouTube page, reporter Ben Simmoneau
stated, "At least three times now in the last month, worshippers here at the
Jamia mosque at the corner of 43rd and Walnut have been greeted by
protesters as they tried to attend prayers. At one point, they say, those
protesters even tried to block the door of this mosque." The claims set the
stage for a puff piece about CAIR.

"Block the door" presumably refers to the now-discredited accusations
against Marcavage and Fleck, but the journalist got the timeframe wrong -
their arrests occurred two months prior to his report - and as demonstrated
in testimony, it was not a protest. And what of the other two incidents
cited? Islamist Watch contacted local police seeking evidence but uncovered
nothing in their records. As for the source of these dubious allegations, a
text version <http://pa.cair.com/media/local-muslims-take-action/>  of
Simmoneau's story contains an intriguing clue: a quote from Rugiatu Conteh,
CAIR-PA's outreach director, who claims to have been at the mosque during
one of the three supposed "protests," but who did not show up to tell her
tale in court.

Hence, as with the Dearborn trial, one must not celebrate the acquittals too
much. Charges never should have been brought before a judge in the first
place, significant resources had to be drained to defend the missionaries,
and Islamists successfully exploited the overblown incident to advance their
own agenda.

Yes, the First Amendment still protects Christians preaching to Muslims. But
as the Philadelphia case and recent controversies
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/23/us-protest-mosque-idUSTRE73K8ID20
110423>  prove, exercising free speech rights amid hypersensitivity toward
Islam does not come without costs.

David J. Rusin <http://davidjrusin.blogspot.com/>  is director of Islamist
Watch <http://www.islamist-watch.org/> , a project of the Middle East Forum
<http://www.meforum.org/> .

 



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