An Alabama attorney is suing Gov. Robert Bentley for issuing an order last month to remove four Confederate flags from the state Capitol grounds, AL.com reported.
The lawsuit, filed by Melvin Hasting in Montgomery County Circuit Court on Tuesday, alleges that the Republican governor “overstepped his authority” in ordering the flags to be taken down following last month’s shooting massacre in Charleston, South Carolina. That attack left nine African American parishioners dead at the historic Emanuel AME Church, where the victims had gathered for a Bible study session. Photographs show the admitted gunman, Dylann Roof, posing with the Confederate battle flag in pictures taken prior to the attack.
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Lawmakers in South Carolina voted to remove the Confederate emblem from the Capitol grounds in Columbia last week. And on Friday, the flag — along with the flag pole — came down.
Unlike in South Carolina, however, which requires a two-thirds supermajority of both houses of the state legislature in order to make any changes to Civil War symbols, Alabama has no law prohibiting the removal of Confederate flags by executive order. On June 24 — one week after the Charleston shooting — Gov. Bentley ordered the removal of four flags that flew above a memorial honoring Civil War soldiers in front of the statehouse in Montgomery.









