
A federal judge in California has ruled that including a small Christian cross on the official seal of Los Angeles County is unconstitutional, siding with civil liberties advocates.
Thursday’s decision, following a two-year legal battle, was handed down by US District Judge Christina Snyder, who said that including the religious emblem in the government symbol “places the county’s power, prestige and purse behind a single religion, Christianity.”
The case erupted in 2014 when the county had the cross drawn on top of the San Gabriel Mission which appears in the logo.
The move reversed a decision by officials a decade earlier to remove the cross from the seal, amid threats of legal action by various groups opposing the inclusion of the crucifix on the county symbol.
The LA county seal appears on flags and official stationery and government buildings across Los Angeles County.
Supporters of keeping the cross on the mission in the seal said it is a historically accurate symbol, given California’s early settlement by Franciscan missionaries from Spain.
They also noted that courts have upheld the constitutionality of the phrases “in God We Trust” on US currency and “one nation under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance.
Thursday’s ruling is a victory for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which brought the suit.
Hector Villagra, executive director of the ACLU of Southern California and attorney Linda Burrow who represented plaintiffs in the case said in a statement Thursday that they were “heartened” by the ruling.
Source: Arab News
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