Another Arkansas School District Added as Defendant in Ten Commandments Lawsuit
Plaintiffs seek to add Conway School District to lawsuit for defying federal injunction by posting Ten Commandments in every classroom, citing violation of students' constitutional rights.
8 Articles
8 Articles


Plaintiffs ask federal court to add more parties to Arkansas Ten Commandments lawsuit
The Ten Commandments are on display in a classroom in the Conway School District in August 2025 in adherence to a state law requiring the religious display in taxpayer-funded public buildings, including school classrooms. (Screenshot from court documents)The plaintiffs challenging Arkansas’ law mandating a display of the Ten Commandments in schools asked a federal court Friday to allow them to sue an additional school district in the ongoing lit…
Plaintiffs ask to amend Ten Commandments lawsuit to add Conway School District to defendants
Plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit filed in Arkansas' western district contesting an Arkansas law requiring the Ten Commandments to be posted in all public school classrooms have asked a federal judge for leave to file an amended complaint, adding the Conway Public School District in Faulkner County to the lawsuit.
Northwest Arkansas families suing over state’s Ten Commandments in schools law seek to add Conway district | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
FAYETTEVILLE -- Families suing four Northwest Arkansas school districts over a new state law requiring public displays of the Ten Commandments want to add the Conway School District as a defendant in their federal lawsuit, according to news releases from the ACLU of Arkansas and the Freedom From Religion Foundation.
Families ask court to add Conway School District to Ark. 10 Commandments lawsuit
Photo by Lesli Whitecotton on Unsplash The plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit against a new Arkansas law mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in public schools have filed a motion to amend their complaint seeking to add the Conway School District as a defendant. The motion follows Judge Timothy Brooks’ ruling in Stinson v. Fayetteville School District No. 1 earlier this month that Act 573 is “obviously unconstitutional” and the discovery b…
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