Sharia in Florida?

Is this a legitimate use of Islamic law in a US civil court?

Is this anything to be alarmed about?

Is this precedent setting?

The question of what law applies in any Florida courtroom usually comes down to two choices: federal or state.

But Hillsborough Circuit Judge Richard Nielsen is being attacked by conservative bloggers after he ruled in a lawsuit March 3 that, to resolve one crucial issue in the case, he will consult a different source.

“This case,” the judge wrote, “will proceed under Ecclesiastical Islamic Law.”

Nielsen said he will decide in a lawsuit against a local mosque, the Islamic Education Center of Tampa, whether the parties in the litigation properly followed the teachings of the Koran in obtaining an arbitration decision from an Islamic scholar.

The suit was filed by several men who say they were improperly ousted as trustees in 2002. The dispute may decide who controls $2.2 million the center received from the state after some of its land was used in a road project.

But attorney Paul Thanasides last week appealed Nielson’s decision with the 2nd District Court of Appeal, saying religion has no place in a secular court.

His client: the mosque.

[…]

The judge said he would use Islamic law to decide only the legitimacy of arbitration.

“What law would we be applying (at) trial?” Thanasides asked.

“That trial would be civil law,” the judge said. “Florida law.”

Is that all there is to it?

Might this be a test to see whether “they” can “get away” with it?

I don’t know.

But I find the matter interesting.

2 thoughts on “Sharia in Florida?”

  1. I think that back in the day when common sense still held sway, a right minded judge would simple decline the case as being an internal matter for the Islamic community concerned, and not a matter for civil jurisprudence. End of story.

    But those days of common sense are gone. Think about it. The same govermental / judicial system says a corporation is a “person”, and has all the right thereof guarenteed by the US constitution.

    Absurd ? Absolutely. Is anyone paying any attention to that ? Not many.

    Reply
  2. two things:

    I want to introduce Catholic law into the court system next.

    Second, who the **** does this guy think he is? Impeach him or vote him out, whichever Florida allows.

    Reply

Comment? Sure!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Above all, love God!
%d bloggers like this: