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FORD
05-05-2007, 05:29 PM
State looks to pull anti-Bush license plate

By Kevin Woster, Journal staff

http://rapidcityjournal.com/content/articles/2007/05/03/news/top/news02_impeach_bush_plate.jpg

RAPID CITY -- Heather Moriah loves the personalized license plates on her silver Prius encouraging the impeachment of President George W. Bush.

But somebody doesn’t agree. And that somebody complained to the state. Now, the South Dakota Division of Motor Vehicles is trying to recall the plates -- which read MPEACHW. And if Moriah doesn’t turn them in voluntarily, the state might send law-enforcement officers to pick them up.

Even so, she’s not immediately inclined to cooperate.

“I don’t think I’m going to play,” Moriah said Thursday afternoon. “The plate isn’t in poor taste. It‘s not sexual in nature or pornographic. To me, a political message should not be considered offensive.”

But Division of Motor Vehicles director Deb Hillmer said Thursday that the law clearly gives the state authority to recall the plates and have them forcibly removed if necessary. And although only one person complained about Moriah’s political statement, that’s all it takes to recall a set of vanity plates, Hillmer said.

“I’m following the letter of the law,” she said. “It’s offensive to someone and not in good taste and decency. And the plates are the property of the state of South Dakota.”

State law declares motor vehicle licenses plates to be the property of the state as long as the plates are valid. The law also allows personalized plates with as many as seven letters for an extra $25 fee. But it gives DMV officials the right to refuse to issue “any letter combination which carries connotations offensive to good taste and decency.”

Hillmer said MPEACHW meets that criterion. The plates never would have been issued if DMV officials had caught their meaning at the time Moriah applied, Hillmer said.

“This was one that we apparently missed when it came through originally, and we received a complaint from an individual that found it offensive,” she said, declining to identify the individual or provide the contents of the complaint. “I don’t think we ever would have issued it if we’d have picked up on what it was inferring.”

Moriah said she bought the 2005 Prius late last summer and fitted it with personalized plates similar to those her partner, Curt Finnegan, had on his blue 2004 Prius. His plates actually read: IMPCH-W.

Moriah said has received plenty of positive reactions in public to her plates and that negative responses have been rare. So she was surprised to receive the April 18 letter from the DMV announcing the recall and giving her 10 days to turn in the plates at the Pennington County Treasurer’s Office or the DMV office in Pierre.

The letter said DMV would issue a refund on the months remaining on Moriah’s license.

She is hesitant to give up the plates, however, because she believes her free-speech rights are being unnecessarily limited.

“It’s kind of sad to me,” she said. “For one person to be able to say they’re offended because it’s different from their political beliefs seems really arbitrary. And I don’t think the law is very clear about what ‘offensive’ means.”

Hillmer said the law gives the state great latitude in making that determination. Moriah is free to exercise her free-speech rights in ways that don’t involve state property or implied state sanction of a given message, Hillemr said.

“They have every right to use that free speech, but they need to do it with a bumper sticker,” she said. “That plate is property of South Dakota. And that (message) is not something the state should advocate.”

It wouldn’t matter if the political message or the president were different, it would be inappropriate on a state plate, Hillmer said.

Moriah has contacted the American Civil Liberties Union, which intends to protest the recall in a letter to the state. Moriah said it’s unlikely the ACLU will pursue legal action, in part because she is planning a move to Pennsylvanian in the next couple of months.

Finnegan already has moved there and replaced his South Dakota plates for Pennsylvania plates, Moriah said. Moriah hopes to leave in June or July, with her plates still intact. Hillmer said it might not work out that way.

“We may have law enforcement go pick them up if we receive more complaints about it,” she said. “If she returns them, we’ll make her new plates. If we have to go pick them up, we probably won’t.”

Hillmer has been with DMV for more than 20 years. She remembers five or six instances when so-called vanity plates were recalled. One of them said “SNIPER” and another “OLDFART.”

Moriah is the only person to complain about a recall, Hillmer said.

Rapid City lawyer Patrick Duffy said there’s plenty of reason to complain. Duffy, who has worked on key civil rights cases involving American Indian voting issues, said action by the state means that any personalized plate must be recalled because of a single complaint, no matter what the message.

“What this means is that every atheist can now wipe out anything that seems to refer to God,” Duffy said. “Will vanity plates for members of the armed forces suddenly be declared offensive if they offend a single pacifist? It’s absolutely preposterous.”

Even obscenity must be judged by the mores and standards of a community, not just one offended individual, Duffy said.

“Here, all we need is one lone citizen who is apparently invested with the complete authority to determine what is good taste and decency for all the rest of us,” he said. “It seems a little tyrannical to me.”

Contact Kevin Woster at 394-8413 or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com

Copyright © 2007 The Rapid City Journal
Rapid City, SD

Link (http://rapidcityjournal.com/articles/2007/05/03/news/top/news02_impeach_bush_plate.txt)

hideyoursheep
05-06-2007, 07:26 PM
Will they go after your "boy king" bumperstickers next?

Freedom of expression my asshairs.

DEMON CUNT
05-06-2007, 07:35 PM
Sweet plate! I hope she gets to keep it.

Isn't this the sort of freedom that terrorists hate?

Isn't this the sort of freedom that American soldiers are dying for in Iraq?

hideyoursheep
05-06-2007, 07:48 PM
Originally posted by DEMON CUNT
Isn't this the sort of freedom that American soldiers are dying for in Iraq?
No, that would be Iraq's freedom to 1 AK per household.

Lots of game to hunt in Baghdad, ya know.:mad:

VanHalener
05-06-2007, 10:34 PM
Originally posted by FORD
[B] State looks to pull anti-Bush license plate

By Kevin Woster, Journal staff

http://rapidcityjournal.com/content/articles/2007/05/03/news/top/news02_impeach_bush_plate.jpg



I am not anti bush. I am all for bush, or a courtesy patch, or old baldy. I hope she wins her battle.

She looks like she can take it to the mat. I'd hit it.:eek: :hitch:

kentuckyklira
05-07-2007, 03:26 AM
The "Land of the Free"!

LOL!

If it really only takes one person who feels offended, and they actually do take away her plates, she and her friends should each feel "offended" at least once a day. They´ll have to employ a guy just to take care of all the plates that have to be confiscated!

scamper
05-07-2007, 09:25 AM
Originally posted by FORD
State law declares motor vehicle licenses plates to be the property of the state as long as the plates are valid.

This is the issue. There are many things you can't put on a licenses plate. Truthfully I don't care, but the state does.

VanHalener
05-07-2007, 02:22 PM
Originally posted by kentuckyklira
The "Land of the Free"!


That's fucking right, pal!

It's just that some people, around the world mind you, have their asses so far up their heads it takes time to recover them.

scamper
05-07-2007, 02:49 PM
Her smug look and Prius remind me of the South Park episode where they were smelling their own farts. I'm supprised she's not keying the truck next to her.

scamper
05-07-2007, 02:50 PM
spelling 101

EAT MY ASSHOLE
05-08-2007, 09:16 AM
This whole article wouldn't work nearly as well if she were driving anything but a Prius.

Fucking liberals.

BigBadBrian
05-08-2007, 10:06 AM
Originally posted by kentuckyklira
The "Land of the Free"!

LOL!

If it really only takes one person who feels offended, and they actually do take away her plates, she and her friends should each feel "offended" at least once a day. They´ll have to employ a guy just to take care of all the plates that have to be confiscated!

Let's talk about the Holocaust and what can or cannot be said about it in Germany or the rest of the EU for that matter. They are just words, correct? What will it hurt?

scamper
05-08-2007, 11:53 AM
MPEACH plate won’t be recalled by DMV
By Kevin Woster, Journal staff

Heather Morijah will get to keep her “MPEACHW” license plates after all.

State officials reversed their position on Monday, rescinding a recall notice of Morijah’s personalized license plates, which encourage the impeachment of President Bush. The state Division of Motor Vehicles sent Morijah a letter last month saying the plates were being recalled because someone had complained about the message.

DMV director Deb Hillmer told the Journal in an interview Thursday that if Morijah didn’t turn in the plates voluntarily, the state might send law officers to confiscate them.

But in a brief news release issued Monday, the secretary of the South Dakota Department of Revenue and Regulation — which includes the DMV — said Morijah could keep the plate.

“After reviewing case law on this issue, we have determined that the plate will not be recalled,” secretary Paul Kinsman said.

Morijah said she got a personal call from Hillmer on Monday morning announcing the decision before the news release came out. After a flurry of media interviews late last week that prompted messages of support from across the nation, Morijah said the state’s change of heart on Monday was “almost like an anti-climax.”

But it was a joyful one, she said.

“I’m glad the state did the right thing. And I feel truly that they did the right thing,” Morijah said. “This whole experience has been one of the most significant of my entire life. And I will never forget it as long as I live.”

Kinsman responded to a Journal request for additional comments Monday afternoon with an e-mail that said a Missouri case dealing with a personalized license plate was important to the decision to drop the recall of Morijah’s plate.

In that case, a woman won the right to keep a personalized license plate that read “ARYAN-1” and attorney’s fees. She overcame both the Missouri Department of Revenue and the state Legislature there with a legal challenge that resulted in a June 12, 2001, unanimous decision by a three-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

U.S. District Judge Richard Battey of Rapid City, a judge within the 8th circuit, was designated to sit in on that case in place of a regular member.

Rapid City lawyer Patrick Duffy said South Dakota officials would have smashed into the legal precedent of the Missouri case if they had continued the recall move on Morijah’s plates. He said it was obvious that the South Dakota DMV hadn’t done its legal research before sending the recall letter to Morijah.

“Certainly, nobody outside of the DMV bureaucracy looked at it before that decision was made,” Duffy said. “What a foolish thing for a bureaucrat to have done. Thank God, the First Amendment lives. It makes me feel good about being a South Dakotan.”

Not everyone felt so good about the decision, however. Burton Robinson of Rapid City contacted the Journal by e-mail Friday to support the recall and criticize Morijah. Informed of the state’s reversal on Monday, Robinson said he was “very disappointed.” Morijah’s license-plate message is inappropriate and disrespectful to the president, Robinson said.

“I think they should take it away from her,” he said. “If she’s so dissatisfied, why doesn’t she move somewhere else,” outside the United States.

Morijah is a Pennsylvania native who plans to move back to her home state this summer. She has been working as the conservation organizer for the West River Office of the Sierra Club in Rapid City. She purchased the personalized plate late last summer for her 2005 Toyota Prius, and said she received mostly positive comments about the message.

A story in Friday’s Journal, which was also posted the night before on the paper’s Web site, prompted a barrage of calls and e-mails to Morijah from across the nation, she said.

“The phone calls started at 7 a.m. Friday morning,” she said. “My office phone, my cell phone and my home phone pretty much rang off the hook Friday.”

Although one caller suggested that her name should be “pariah” instead of Morijah, she said the overwhelming majority were supportive. Morijah said one caller said he would send her $19.84, a reference to the novel “1984” by George Orwell depicting life in a repressive society.

Other people told Morijah that they would apply for their own personalized plate — including MPEACH1, MPEACH2 and MPEACH3. Morijah intends to keep her plates on through her move back to Pennsylvania and until they are no longer valid there.

After that, they’ll become keepsakes or maybe bits of merchandise.

“I’ve had people suggest that I sell them on eBay,” she said. “I’m not going to rule that out entirely. But I wouldn’t think about it until after I get settled.”

Morijah said her experience increased her respect for the American Civil Liberties Union, which contacted the state to oppose the recall. Morijah had contacts with ACLU legal experts in New York, she said.

“I have a new-found respect for the organization and what it does,” she said. “They’re incredibly supportive and determined to protect our constitutional rights.”

http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/articles/2007/05/08/news/top/news02.txt

scamper
05-08-2007, 11:59 AM
Originally posted by scamper
“This whole experience has been one of the most significant of my entire life. And I will never forget it as long as I live.”

Morijah is a Pennsylvania native who plans to move back to her home state this summer. She has been working as the conservation organizer for the West River Office of the Sierra Club in Rapid City.


Talk about a stereotype.

stringfelowhawk
05-08-2007, 09:00 PM
Yep, that is certainly appropriate. Good thing they let her keep it cause further stepping on the First Amendment is not exactly the kind of exposure Bush lovers should be looking for right now.

I was stationed in Va when a guy I worked with had a plate that said, "Satan1". Was he a devil worshipper? NO, he wasn't but as luck would have it that is the plate he got when he registered his car in Va. One officer decided it offended him and told him to change it or face a reprimand. Now, that would have been a moment that, officer or not, I would have blown my top. He kept his and told him even as a member of the armed forces he has the right to practice any religion he sees fit not telling him that he wasn't a follower of that religion to begin with. He just felt like he was being approached in the wrong way with a threat before even being asked about it. I agreed with him. He refused to get rid of it and was taken to Mast for it. Well, after he went over the C.O.'s head and revealed that he was being treated unfairly because a southern baptist follower was offended by his tag and was threatened with punishment he leaned on the right people. See, he did was he was ordered to do then went over their head. Seems his right to practice religion was suppressed and even in the military that is a big no no. He was vindicated when the C.O. was forced to step down. Even though he didn't practice that particular religion he believed that others have the right to and if he were being threatened then undoubtably someone else would have as well.

You can say what you want about this situation but I saw what their threats did to him. He got every shit job you can think of. As an E-5 in a supervisory position to doing the job of an E-1 being forced to stay late and come in early even though that kind of (EMI-Extra-military Instruction) is supposed to be illegal (funny how senior people always find a way to justify it like Spock did lying i.e. "I'm a Vulcan. I am incapable of lying." "A Lie?" Spock-"An ommission., An exaggeration." etc.)