Perilous Times
Lawyer ordered to pay damages to Jews for Jesus - Rabbi/attorney plans
to appeal, denies anti-Christian bias
Posted: November 13, 2010
12:45 am Eastern
By Brian Fitzpatrick
A Florida judge has ordered lawyer Barry Silver to pay $45,273.90 in
attorney's fees to the attorneys representing Jews for Jesus in a suit
filed by Silver.
The fees are intended to compensate Jews for Jesus for legal expenses
incurred after Silver repeatedly refiled virtually identical suits
against the organization when the initial suit had been dismissed for
lack of merit.
The suit accuses Jews for Jesus of placing Silver's client, Edith Rapp,
in a "false light" by claiming untruthfully that Rapp had accepted the
doctrinal teachings of Christianity, subjecting her to ridicule in her
synagogue. Rapp's stepson, Bruce, a member of Jews for Jesus, announced
his stepmother's conversion in a Jews for Jesus newsletter.
In his October 29 order, Palm Beach County circuit court judge Edward
Fine declared that attorney Barry Silver was "engaging in bad faith
litigation conduct."
Silver said that he plans to appeal the penalty, on the grounds that
the Florida Supreme Court has ruled that his factual allegations do
have merit, and he has filed another amended version of the case before
the Florida courts. The case could have profound legal implications for
First Amendment freedoms of speech and religion.
"He sought to use the court system to defame Jews for Jesus," said
attorney Mat Staver. "This attorney has allowed his hatred for
Christianity to cloud his professional abilities. He has an animus
against Christianity and has used this lawsuit as a polemic against
Christianity and Jews for Jesus in spite of warnings from the court.
The court awarded this sanction to stop this frivolous activity."
Silver vehemently denies that he hates Christianity.
"The accusation that I am anti-Christian is completely false," Silver
told reporters. "The allegations in this complaint are not that I am
anti-Christian, but that my client finds it offensive to be described
as a member of [Jews for Jesus].
"I'm a lawyer and a rabbi," Silver said. "I'm one of the few rabbis who
does interfaith weddings. I represent a Christian church, Westgate
Tabernacle, I've been litigating pro bono for years in a conflict with
the county about sheltering homeless people. I argued that is an
infringement of their religious beliefs."
Staver, president of Liberty Counsel, which is representing Jews for
Jesus in the case, said that any payments would go to Liberty Counsel
directly because the firm did not charge Jews for Jesus for its
services.
Staver said Liberty Counsel would "begin the process of recovering the
fees" following Judge Fine's order, promising to "force a sale of
property" if Silver fails to pay up.
"He has filed the same case over and over, he's now on his fourth
round," Staver explained. "The first three were almost identical, and
that's what he got sanctioned for by this court."
Silver's first three versions of the complaint castigated Jews for
Jesus harshly.
• Jews for Jesus uses "many false assertions and deceptions to try to
induce members of the Jewish faith to abandon the beliefs of their
heritage yet believe that they are still Jews," Silver wrote.
• "Certain leaders of Jews for Jesus who are Christian, change their
names in order to sound as if they were Jewish in order to make the
organization seem more Jewish."
• "Jews for Jesus targets elderly Jews for conversion in order to
persuade them to leave all or some of their money to Jews for Jesus
instead of their families when they die."
Silver also accused Bruce Rapp of "fabricating" the story of his
stepmother's conversion in order to "bolster his credentials" in Jews
for Jesus, and to "retaliate" for his stepmother's resistance to his
efforts to convert his father.
In the latest version of his complaint, Silver removes much of the
inflammatory language describing Jews for Jesus.
The "false light" case could help "define and clarify the law of
defamation in Florida," said Silver.
"False light" cases are accepted in other states, but not yet in
Florida, according to Staver.
The Liberty Counsel president said such cases threaten the First
Amendment by lowering the standard required to pursue defamation cases.
Under "false light," defamatory statements need not be inaccurate, only
"offensive," to be legally actionable.