by Robert Quigley | 9:04 am, December 1st, 2009
The news that police shot alleged cop killer Maurice Clemmons this morning doesn’t dispel the questions raised by his release. Last night, shortly after former governor Mike Huckabee got a fairly gentle interview on The O’Reilly Factor, Anderson Cooper grilled Judge Marion Humphrey, who had supported Clemmons’ release from prison. Among other things, he asked if Humphrey and Huckabee had been duped by Clemmons’ professed Christian beliefs.
Judge Humphrey was open about his own Christianity from the start of the interview. In response to Cooper’s questions about how a man with such a long rap sheet got released, he had this to say: “this is the Advent season. And one of the things about our lord and savior, Jesus Christ, is that he promoted mercy. And that is a part of the makeup of some of us who serve on the benches, who serve on parole boards, who serve in governor’s office.”
Humphrey hesitated to say that he regretted trusting Clemmons, though he condemned the “atrocity” of the police shooting. At this point, Cooper turned up the heat, asking if the suspect “tricked” Judge Humphrey — and Governor Huckabee — by professing Christian beliefs: (transcript via CNN)
- COOPER: Do you think he — do you think he tricked you? I mean, you talk about being a Christian and…
HUMPHREY: No, no, no, he didn’t — he didn’t trick me. He didn’t trick me in anything. He didn’t say anything about his belief in Jesus Christ. I spoke of my belief of Christ. And I believe in his mercy.
COOPER: Because he does talk about his belief in Christ to — to Governor Huckabee in this.
HUMPHREY: He did not speak of that to me, though.
COOPER: OK.
HUMPHREY: That is to Governor Huckabee. And I think Governor Huckabee acted very responsibly in this whole matter.
In the past, Huckabee’s evangelical Christianity has been touted as an advantage within the Republican party. If his political opponents paint his stance in the Maurice Clemmons affair as naively live-and-let-live, they could potentially twist it into a liability, however fairly or unfairly.
[07:39 min.]
December 1, 2009
The Shot: goats on the bus
Posted: 10:45 AM ET
(08:10 min.)
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