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Award to Justice Breyer spurs Catholic protest

Thu, Oct 30th 2008 12:00 am
WASHINGTON (AP) - The leader of the Catholic church in New York is among those criticizing Fordham University for giving an award to Supreme Court Justice Hon. Stephen Breyer, a supporter of abortion rights.

A spokesman for the New York Archdiocese said Cardinal Edward Egan was surprised to learn that Breyer would receive an award from Fordham's law school and has spoken to the Catholic university's leaders to ensure "that a mistake of this sort will not happen again."

Spokesman Joseph Zwilling said Monday that Egan was talking about Breyer's votes on the court in favor of abortion rights.

The protest against Breyer is being led by the Cardinal Newman Society, a Virginia-based conservative Catholic group.

Breyer is scheduled to receive the Fordham-Stein Ethics Prize Wednesday at a dinner in New York. Past recipients include state and federal judges who also support abortion rights.

More than 1,100 Fordham alumni and others have signed a petition to the university administration calling for the reward to be revoked, the Cardinal Newman Society said on its Web site.

The petition specifically cites Breyer's majority opinion in a 2000 case that struck down a Nebraska law banning a procedure that abortion opponents call partial-birth abortion, as well as Breyer's dissent in a 2007 case that upheld a federal law banning the same procedure.

The abortion ban was challenged by Bellevue abortion doctor LeRoy Carhart, who testified before the Supreme Court.

In the 2000 case, the high court ruled for Carhart in striking down a similar Nebraska law because it lacked an exception to preserve a woman's health and encompassed a more common abortion method.

Breyer and the law school did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Egan has previously criticized Catholic elected officials and candidates who support abortion rights. Zwilling said this is the first instance he is aware of in which Egan has spoken out against giving an award to someone over the issue of abortion. In addition, Breyer is not himself Catholic; he is Jewish.