ACLU wants Kim Davis’ ‘scalp to hang on the wall’

Federal prisoner Kim Davis walked into the Kentucky jail cell
wearing an orange jumpsuit and holding a Bible.

 

“When I went back into that holding cell I hit my knees and just
prayed, just cried out for God to give me some peace and assurance that all was going to be well – and I prayed and I sang,” she told me in her first digital
interview.

 

It was September 3 – the day Mrs. Davis became the first Christian jailed as a result of the Supreme Court ruling legalizing gay marriage.

 

Federal Judge David Bunning ordered her jailed for contempt of
court after she defied a federal court order to issue marriage licenses to gay couples. He denied her request to accommodate her religious beliefs by simply removing her name from the marriage form.

 

“That’s all I ever asked for,” she said. “I didn’t ask for them to
jump over the moon and give me the stars and pull the sun down for me. I asked
a very simple and doable accommodation.”

 

Mrs. Davis, the clerk in Rowan County, was released five days
later after she agreed that she would not interfere with deputies who were issuing licenses to gay couples.

 

Read More: ACLU wants Kim Davis’ ‘scalp to hang on the wall’ | Fox News

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