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Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: March 19, 2010
Sen. Steve Russell
Sen. Steve Russell submitted the following letter
to the editor in response to an article in the Tulsa World.
A Question of Accuracy
To the Editor:
I would like to address several inaccuracies contained in a recent
editorial, “A Question of Fairness.” The piece claimed
that my bill prohibits state authorities from requesting aid from
the Federal government on hate crimes, but nothing in the bill at
all would prohibit such requests by state law enforcement. It also
does not exclude any Federal language. This bill protects speech
and delineates what measures state law enforcement can take in cases
that are involuntarily usurped.
The new federal hate crime law states that speech, belief and assembly
would not be the ‘sole’ basis for the prosecution of
a crime. Anyone who believes in the first amendment should be concerned
that these fundamental rights could be a basis at all for prosecution
when not directly related to the commission of a crime. My legislation
simply clarifies that unless speech, belief or assembly is directly
related to the planning or commission of an actual crime, it will
not be admissible in Oklahoma courts under the Oklahoma Hate Crimes
laws.
SB 1965 defines what constitutes criminal speech under Oklahoma’s
law. It does not usurp Federal authority as some suppose. It does
establish equal protections of all Oklahomans under the law with
regard to their speech and religious views.
Senator Steve Russell
R-Oklahoma City
Senate District 45
For more information contact:
Sen. Russell: 405-521-5618

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