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Gemtun
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Do you think it's appropriate for a judge to sentence an offender to attend worship services to avoid jail?
Judge: Go Worship and You Can Skip Jail
A devout Christian judge in Kentucky has an offer for some repeat drug and alcohol offenders: Go to worship services and skip jail or rehab. This alternative sentencing by District Judge Michael Caperton, 50, is being done to "help people and their families," he told The Associated Press. But it has some in an uproar, who insist it violates the separation of church and state.
"I don't think there's a church-state issue, because it's not mandatory and I say 'worship services' instead of 'church,'" Caperton told AP. Judges coming up with creative sentences that exclude jail is not that unusual. For example, a judge might order a vandal to repaint a wall he covered in graffiti. But legal experts told AP that they don't know of any other judge in the country who is giving offenders the option of going to church instead of jail. Although Caperton has made the offer about 50 times, it is not clear if the novel sentence has had a positive or negative impact.
The American Civil Liberties Union doesn't like it, insisting the worship instead of jail option raises constitutional issues. "The judge is saying that those willing to go to worship services can avoid jail in the same way that those who decline to go cannot," ACLU attorney David Friedman told AP. "That strays from government neutrality towards religion."
