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Federal Judge in Michigan Nixes Religious Challenge to AIG Bailout

January 18, 2011

A federal judge in Michigan has dismissed a lawsuit challenging the bailout of American International Group on religious grounds.

An Ypsilanti man claimed the United States should not have bailed out AIG because the insurance giant sells international financial products specifically tailored to Islamic principles. But after more than two years of litigation, a judge said Friday that such products are not a result of direct government action and represent just a fraction of AIG’s revenue.

U.S. District Judge Lawrence Zatkoff in Port Huron says the bailout is not an ‘excessive entanglement with religion.” He says it’s not comparable to tax dollars going directly to a church or religious institution.

An Ann Arbor law group that takes cases on behalf of Christian causes says it will appeal.

Topics Legislation Michigan AIG

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Latest Comments

  • January 19, 2011 at 7:38 am
    pianoman088 says:
    Holy Cow!!! A pro-Obama comment on IJ!!
  • January 18, 2011 at 3:02 pm
    W R Lockhart says:
    AIG is in the process of paying off the loans (note, they were loans, not grants) at a handsome profit to the government, just as the banks and the car cos. (other than Chrysl... read more
  • January 18, 2011 at 2:57 pm
    W R Lockhart says:
    The Ypsilanti man could just as easily argue that because US money has religious mottos on it the gov't has no authority to issue it and all out currency is therefore worthle... read more

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