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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Boy_Scouts_of_America_membership_controversies
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dbr:Winkler_v._Rumsfeld
Subject Item
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Winkler v. Rumsfeld Winkler vs. Rumsfeld
rdfs:comment
Winkler vs. Rumsfeld est une affaire de justice relative au soutien de l'armée américaine aux jamborees de l'organisation Boy Scouts of America. Winkler v. Rumsfeld was a case regarding the United States Armed Forces and their support of the Boy Scouts of America's national Scout jamborees. Every four years, the Boy Scouts of America holds a national Scout jamboree, where for ten days, approximately 30,000-40,000 Scouts camp out and participate in a wide variety of activities. At the time of the case, the US Department of Defense was the official host of the jamboree. From 1981 until 2010, the jamboree was held at Fort A.P. Hill, a US Army base in Virginia. The US Government spent an average of $2 million a year towards hosting of the jamboree.
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Bauer
dbp:arguedate
0001-04-06
dbp:argueyear
2006
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dbr:United_States_Court_of_Appeals_for_the_Seventh_Circuit
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Seal of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.svg
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0001-04-04
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2007
dbp:fullname
Eugene Winkler, Gary Gerson, Timuel Black, Mary Cay Marubio and C. Douglas Ferguson v. Donald H. Rumsfeld
dbp:holding
Taxpayers lack standing to sue to address Federal budget issues.
dbp:judges
Diane Pamela Wood William J. Bauer Diane S. Sykes
dbp:litigants
Winkler v. Rumsfeld
dbp:majority
Wood
dbo:abstract
Winkler vs. Rumsfeld est une affaire de justice relative au soutien de l'armée américaine aux jamborees de l'organisation Boy Scouts of America. Winkler v. Rumsfeld was a case regarding the United States Armed Forces and their support of the Boy Scouts of America's national Scout jamborees. Every four years, the Boy Scouts of America holds a national Scout jamboree, where for ten days, approximately 30,000-40,000 Scouts camp out and participate in a wide variety of activities. At the time of the case, the US Department of Defense was the official host of the jamboree. From 1981 until 2010, the jamboree was held at Fort A.P. Hill, a US Army base in Virginia. The US Government spent an average of $2 million a year towards hosting of the jamboree. The Boy Scouts of America has always required all Scouts to agree to the Scout Oath which includes the phrase "To do my Duty to God". There have been several high-profile cases in which atheists and agnostics were removed from the organization for failing to agree to the Scout Oath. The American Civil Liberties Union brought suit on behalf of Chicago-area taxpayers Eugene Winkler, Methodist pastor, Gary Gerson, Reform rabbi, Timuel Black, teacher and civil rights activist, Douglas Ferguson and Mary Cay Marubio arguing that the Department of Defense's use of taxpayer money to fund the jamborees of what they called a private religious organization violates the First Amendment, which prohibits Congress from establishing a religion. In 2005, a U.S. District Court ruled that the DOD's spending on national Scout jamborees violates the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution. The decision was subsequently reversed by the US Court of Appeals on April 4, 2007 in Winkler vs Gates (renamed due to a new Secretary of Defense), which ruled that the plaintiffs lacked legal standing as taxpayers to bring the suit in the first place. Therefore, the 2010 Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill and future support by DOD of Jamborees continued as before. The case arose out of Winkler v. Chicago School Reform Board of Trustees, in which the plaintiffs sued the U.S. government and the city of Chicago.
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Sykes
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