- Posted November 06, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Court lets Navy chaplains pursue bias complaint
By Frederic J. Frommer
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Evangelical Protestant chaplains who claim the Navy discriminates against them have won a second chance to obtain a quick court order against practices they say favor mainline Protestant and Roman Catholic chaplains for promotion.
Last week, a three-judge federal appeals court reversed a district judge's dismissal of the evangelicals' request for a preliminary injunction. They want the court to order the Navy to alter the composition of promotion panels and make their votes public, not secret.
The case was brought by Baptist, Evangelical, Pentecostal, and Charismatic chaplains who follow no formal liturgy in worship services and baptize at the "age of reason" instead of at infancy.
The lower court was ordered to conduct factual findings on whether they are likely to win and thus entitled to a preliminary court order.
Published: Tue, Nov 6, 2012
headlines Oakland County
- Judge’s memorial unveiled
- Judge to lead community-based behavioral health workshop
- ABA President Michelle A. Behnke calls Equity Summit 2026 ‘a step towards action’
- Michigan Human Trafficking Commission launches quarterly newsletter
- Nessel files testimony to protect ratepayers in Google data center proposal
headlines National
- Bill Kurtis’ memoir tells how law school trained him for covering trials
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Justice Barrett’s home targeted in attempted swatting call
- Texting-and-driving charges dropped against woman without right hand
- Fender warns guitar makers to stop producing Stratocaster look-a-likes
- General counsel compensation climbs, aligned with equity and company scale




