Atlanta
Fire Chief Kelvin Cochran (Image source: alliancedefence tweet)
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The
case of Atlanta’s dismissed fire chief is turning into a national debate over
anti-discrimination policies and religious liberty, as he filed a lawsuit on Thursday
alleging wrongful termination under the Civil Rights Act.
“Americans are guaranteed the freedom to
live without fear of being fired because of their beliefs and thoughts,”
said Senior Counsel David Cortman of the Alliance to Defend Freedom (ADF) representing
Chief Kelvin Cochran. “The city
of Atlanta is not above the Constitution and federal law. In America, a
religious or ideological test cannot be used to fire a public servant,”
added Cortman.
Jenna
Garland, spokeswoman for Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, countered that the city
would contest the charges, “confident
that the decision to terminate Mr Cochran was both the right thing to do and
fully legal.”
A
devoted evangelical Christian, Cochran was suspended in November 2014,
following anonymous complaints over a devotional book he self-published a year
earlier. After a month-long investigation, the city concluded Cochran had not
actually discriminated against anyone – but sacked him anyway.
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A
petition with 50,000 signatures for Cochran’s reinstatement was handed to the
mayor a week after the chief’s dismissal, as hundreds gathered in a show of
support at the Georgia State Capitol. “If
a government will fire someone for their religious beliefs, no beliefs are safe
from government regardless of how sacred those beliefs may be,”
said Tony Perkins, president of the conservative group Family Research Council,
who was at the rally.
Cochran’s
cause was also taken up by the Faith and Freedom Coalition, the Georgia Baptist
Convention, and the Alliance Defending Freedom. ADF is representing Cochran in
his anti-discrimination suit. Cochran is asking for compensatory damages,
reinstatement to his old job, and the city’s admission it violated his
constitutional rights.
Georgia’s congressional
delegation also came out in support of Cochran, sending a letter to the city on
February 10 noting that the city’s actions appeared to “violate fundamental principles of free speech
and religious freedom…. The only way Chief Cochran could avoid his views would
be to disown his religion.”
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