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Back in
the Courts
Bennington Banner
By John LeMay
Staff Writer
August 31, 2002
Scott Huminski, a Main Street resident who was
banned in 1999 from entering Vermont courthouses, won a victory last
week when a federal judge ruled that Huminski may enter the courts
while he continues to fight the ban in a federal appeals court.
Huminski, who is gathering
signatures to qualify as a candidate for Bennington County state's
attorney, said recently that the ban against his presence in
courtrooms could damage his credibility as a candidate.
It was the second time U.S.
District Court Judge J. Garvan Murtha has lifted the ban since it
was imposed.
In May 1999, Vermont
District Court Judge Nancy Corsones, as presiding judge in Rutland,
issued a no trespass order against Huminski, after he parked a van
posted with signs criticizing Corsones as a "butcher of the
constitution" in the Rutland district court parking lot.
A second judge, Patricia
Zimmerman, reiterated the no trespass order a few days later.
In February 2001, Murtha
issued a temporary injunction nullifying the order, then reinstated
the ban in July 2002, and reversed himself again last week.
In last week's decision,
Murtha declared that Huminski's appeal has "a substantial
possibility of success" and that Huminski would be "irreparably
harmed" by being barred from courts while the constitutionality of
the ban remains in question.
Last week's decision "means
that while the case is being fought in the appellate court, Scott
can exercise his right to engage in peaceful protest," Huminski's
attorney, Robert Corn-Revere, said Friday.
The underlying issue to be
heard in the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York state is
whether the trespass order barring Huminski from Vermont courts is a
violation of his First Amendment rights.
"I feel that the government
shouldn't be able to arbitrarily exclude people from government
institutions because they don't like what they have to say," said
Corn-Revere, of the Washington D.C. firm Hogan and Hartson.
Corn-Revere specializes in
First Amendment cases, and is representing Huminski free of charge.
Huminski's van, bearing
political messages, is a frequent sight around Bennington. Huminski
has recently been gathering petitions for a run against incumbent
State's Attorney William Wright.
Corsones could not be
reached for comment Friday evening.
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