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{{short description|American pastor and activist (1929–2014)}}
[[Image:Fred Phelps on his pulpit.jpg|frame|Fred Phelps d.f., c. 2001]]
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2020}}<!--[[WP:STRONGNAT]]-->
{{Use American English|date=December 2023}}
<!-- NOT OLYMPIAN'S DAD!
This Fred Phelps is a different person than the Fred Phelps who is the father of Olympian Michael Phelps.
-->
{{Infobox person
| name = Fred Phelps
| image = Fred Phelps 10-29-2002.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = Phelps in 2002
| birth_name = Fred Waldron Phelps
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1929|11|13|mf=y}}<ref name="cjonline1994"/><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle">{{cite web |title=Fred Phelps Sr., founder of Westboro Baptist Church, dies at 84 |url-access=subscription |website=Wichita Eagle |date=2014-03-20 |url=https://www.kansas.com/news/article1137753.html |access-date=2024-07-06}}</ref>
| birth_place = [[Meridian, Mississippi]], U.S.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
| death_date = {{death date and age|2014|03|19|1929|11|13|mf=y}}<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
| death_place = [[Topeka, Kansas]], U.S.
| organization = [[Westboro Baptist Church]]
| other_names =
| education = {{Unbulleted list
| [[Associate's degree]], [[Pasadena City College#School history|John Muir College]], 1951
| Law degree, [[Washburn University]], 1964<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
}}
| occupation = [[Pastor]], [[lawyer]]<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
| party = <!-- Please discuss on the talk page before editing party affiliation. Fred Phelps ran as a Democrat in multiple primaries and there is no indication that he switched his affiliation.
-->[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
| title =
| spouse = {{marriage|Margie Marie Simms|1952<!--As marriage ended with his death, year is omitted per Template:Marriage instructions--->}}
| children = 13, including<br />[[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] and <br />[[Nathan Phelps]]<!--NOTABLE CHILDREN ONLY-->
| parents = <!--NOTABLE PARENTS ONLY-->
| relations = [[Megan Phelps-Roper]] (granddaughter)<!--NOTABLE RELATIVES ONLY-->
}}


'''Fred Waldron Phelps Sr.''' (November 13, 1929&nbsp;– March 19, 2014) was an American [[Minister (Christianity)|minister]] and [[Disbarment|disbarred]] lawyer who served as the pastor of the [[Westboro Baptist Church]], worked as a civil rights attorney, and ran for statewide election in [[Kansas]]. A divisive and controversial figure, he gained national attention for his [[Homophobia|homophobic]] views and protests near the [[funeral]]s of gay people, [[AIDS]] victims, military veterans, and disaster victims who he believed were killed as a result of God punishing the U.S. for having "bankrupt values" and tolerating homosexuality. Phelps founded the Westboro Baptist Church, a [[Topeka, Kansas]]-based independent [[Primitive Baptist]] congregation, in 1955. It has been described by the [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] as "arguably the most obnoxious and rabid [[hate group]] in America".<ref name="CSM">[http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20160712030214/http://www.csmonitor.com/layout/set/amphtml/USA/Society/2014/0320/Fred-Phelps-no-funeral-for-the-preacher-who-picketed-so-many-video Phelps: No funeral for the preacher who picketed so many.] ''[[Christian Science Monitor]]'' (March 20, 2014), retrieved September 27, 2016.</ref> Its signature slogan, "God Hates Fags", remains the name of the group's principal website.<!--<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.directnic.com/whois/index.php?query=godhatesfags.com|title=GodHatesFags.com registration information}}</ref> -->
'''Fred Waldron Phelps, Sr.''' (born [[November 13]], [[1929]]) is the highly controversial leader of the [[Westboro Baptist Church]], a religious organization based out of his home in [[Topeka, Kansas|Topeka]], [[Kansas]]. Phelps is best known for preaching that [[God]] hates [[homosexuality|homosexuals]] and will punish both them and "fag enablers" (which his church defines as anyone whom they find to be insufficiently anti-homosexual). He claims events such as the [[September 11, 2001 attacks|September 11 attacks]] and [[Hurricane Katrina]] are caused by God because of this hatred. He and his followers frequently picket various events, especially [[gay pride]] gatherings, funerals of gay men and funerals of soldiers, feeling it is their sacred duty to share their views with others.


In addition to funerals, Phelps and his followers—mostly his own immediate family members—picketed [[gay pride]] gatherings, high-profile political events, university commencement ceremonies, live performances of ''[[The Laramie Project]]'', and functions sponsored by [[Christians|mainstream Christian]] groups with which he had no affiliation, arguing it was their sacred duty to warn others of God's anger. He continued doing so in the face of numerous legal challenges—some of which reached the [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]]—and near-universal opposition and contempt from other religious groups and the general public.<ref name="abrams2006"/> Laws enacted at both the federal<ref>{{citation|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/30/AR2006053000134.html|title=Bush Says U.S. Must Honor War Dead|last=Pickler|first=Nedra|date=May 30, 2006|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|agency=The Associated Press|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref><ref>[http://veterans.house.gov/HR1627 Honoring America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130214093535/http://veterans.house.gov/hr1627|date=February 14, 2013}}, ''U.S. House of Representatives'' (accessed February 21, 2013)</ref><ref name="HP 20120806">{{cite news|last=Wing|first=Nick|title=Honoring America's Veterans Act Signed By Obama, Restricting Westboro Military Funeral Protests|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/06/honoring-americas-veterans-act-obama_n_1748454.html|work=The Huffington Post|access-date=January 16, 2013|date=August 6, 2012}}</ref> and state<ref>{{citation|url=http://cjonline.com/stories/032007/sta_157398869.shtml|title=Panel Sets Buffer Zone|last=Carpenter|first=Tim|date=March 20, 2007|work=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|access-date=December 10, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140318210545/http://cjonline.com/stories/032007/sta_157398869.shtml|archive-date=March 18, 2014}}</ref> levels for the specific purpose of curtailing his disruptive activities were limited in their effectiveness due to the Constitutional protections afforded to Phelps under the [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|First Amendment]].
Phelps is a self-described "[[fire and brimstone]]" preacher who believes that homosexuality and its acceptance have doomed most of the world to eternal damnation. His group has slightly less than 100 members, 90 of whom are related to Phelps through blood or marriage, although his daughter Shirley claims that only 80% are related. {{ref|fox}} The group is built around an anti-homosexual core theology, with many of their activities stemming from the mantra "God hates fags," which is also the name of the group's webpage. [[Gay rights]] activists, as well as [[Christians]] of virtually every denomination, have denounced him as a producer of [[homophobia|anti-gay]] [[propaganda]] and violence-inspiring [[hate speech]].


[[LGBT social movements|Gay rights supporters]] denounced him as a producer of [[homophobia|anti-gay]] propaganda and violence-inspiring [[hate speech]], and even Christians from fundamentalist denominations distanced themselves from him.<ref name="lauerman1999" /> In particular, Phelps and his church routinely targeted the [[Catholic Church]] with picket signs and online websites claiming that "priests rape boys" and "fag priests" and focusing on the [[Catholic Church sexual abuse cases|Catholic Church sex scandals]], calling the pope "The Godfather of pedophiles".<ref name="Barrett-Fox 2017 r226">{{cite web | last=Barrett-Fox | first=Rebecca | title=A Friendly Welcome to a Hate-Filled Church | website=The Chronicle of Higher Education | date=2017-01-29 | url=https://www.chronicle.com/article/a-friendly-welcome-to-a-hate-filled-church/ | access-date=2024-02-10}}</ref><ref name="Westboro Baptist Church Home Page 2018 m427">{{cite web | title=Westboro Baptist Church Preaching Signs | website=Westboro Baptist Church Home Page | date=2018-07-08 | url=https://www.godhatesfags.com/signs/index6.html | access-date=2024-02-10}}</ref><ref name="Drehle 2014 h053">{{cite magazine | last=Drehle | first=David Von | title=Good Riddance, Fred Phelps | magazine=TIME | date=2014-03-20 | url=https://time.com/32564/fred-phelps-westboro-baptist-obituary/ | access-date=2024-02-10}}</ref> Although Phelps died in 2014, the Westboro Baptist Church remains in operation. It continues to conduct regular demonstrations outside movie theaters, universities, government buildings, and other facilities in Topeka and elsewhere, and is still characterized as a hate group by the [[Anti-Defamation League]] and the Southern Poverty Law Center.<ref name="adlwbc">{{citation|url=http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/default.asp |title=Westboro Baptist Church |author=Anti-Defamation League|author-link=Anti-Defamation League|access-date=December 10, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070308113420/http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/default.asp |archive-date=March 8, 2007 }}</ref><ref name="potok2006">{{citation|last=Potok|first=Mark|year=2006|title=Hate Groups Increase Numbers, Unite Against Immigrants|journal=Intelligence Report|publisher=[[Southern Poverty Law Center]]|issue=121|url=http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2006/spring/the-year-in-hate-2005}}</ref>
Phelps rose to national prominence in 1998 when he and congregants from Westboro picketed the funeral of [[gay]] murder victim [[Matthew Shepard]], delivering an obscenity-laden sermon (with focus given to graphic descriptions of homosexual sex acts) informing the mourners that Shepard had gone to hell and that everyone in attendance would join him there. Ever since, Phelps and Westboro have remained in the national limelight for their regular pickets of events ranging from [[gay pride]] parades to the funerals of soldiers killed in the [[Iraq War]] to grand openings of [[Starbucks]].


==Early life and education==
==Pre-picketing years (1929-1989)==
[[File:Fred Phelps as young man.jpg|thumb|Phelps in 1962]]
===Childhood===
Fred Waldron Phelps was born on November 13, 1929, in [[Meridian, Mississippi]], the elder of two children of Catherine Idalette (née Johnston) and Fred Wade Phelps. His father was a [[railroad bull|railroad policeman]] for the [[Columbus and Greenville Railway]] and a devout [[Methodist]]; his mother was a homemaker.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="cjonline1994">{{citation|url=http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps01.shtml|title=The Transformation of Fred Phelps|last=Taschler|first=Joe|date=August 3, 1994|work=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130301061252/http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps01.shtml|archive-date=March 1, 2013}}</ref> Catherine Phelps died of [[esophageal cancer]] in 1935 at the age of 28.<ref name="cjonline1994"/> Her aunt, Irene Jordan, helped care for Fred and his younger sister Martha Jean until December 1944, when his father married Olive Briggs, a 39-year-old woman who was divorced.<ref name="cjonline1994"/>
[[Image:Phelpses.JPG|thumb|250px|The earliest known photo of Fred Phelps; he is pictured here at the age of two with his younger sister, Martha-Jean. The shadow in the picture is Fred Wade Phelps, Fred Phelps' father, who took the photo]]


Fred distinguished himself scholastically and was an [[Eagle Scout (Boy Scouts of America)|Eagle Scout]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Mann|first=Fred|url=http://www.kansas.com/2012/12/18/2608194/2006-what-led-fred-phelps-to-his.html|title=2006: What led Westboro's Fred Phelps to his beliefs and actions?|newspaper=Wichita Eagle|date=December 18, 2012|access-date=March 16, 2014|archive-date=March 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140316213732/http://www.kansas.com/2012/12/18/2608194/2006-what-led-fred-phelps-to-his.html}}</ref> He also was a member of Phi Kappa, a high school social fraternity, president of the Young Peoples Department of Central United Methodist Church and was honored as the best drilled member of the Mississippi Junior State Guard, a unit similar to the [[Reserve Officer Training Corps]]. He graduated from high school at 16 years old, ranking sixth in his graduating class of 213 students, and was the class orator at his commencement.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cjonline.com/article/20140320/NEWS/303209780|title=Phelps' life turned from brilliance to hatred|last=Biles|first=Jan|website=The Topeka Capital-Journal|language=en|access-date=May 18, 2019}}</ref> After graduating from high school he received an appointment to the [[United States Military Academy]] at [[West Point, New York|West Point]]; but after attending a tent revival meeting, decided to pursue a religious calling instead.<ref name="cjonline1994"/>
Fred Phelps was born in [[Meridian, Mississippi|Meridian]], [[Mississippi]] in 1929, the first of two children; his sister, Martha-Jean, was one year younger. His father, Fred Wade Phelps, was a detective employed by the local [[Rail transport|railroad]], whose job was to keep people from illegally riding the rails. Fred recalls his father often came home from work "with blood up to his shoulders". Fred's [[mother]], Catherine Phelps, was a [[homemaker]]. The family were devout members of the [[Methodist Episcopal Church, South]]. Catherine died of throat cancer at the age of twenty eight, when Phelps was five years old. It was the first significant experience of his life and one that appears to have affected him greatly. One of Fred's only memories of his mother is the fact that since she was the only woman on their street who owned a musical instrument (a [[piano]]), she used to push it to the front of the house, open all the doors and windows, and play for the pleasure of the neighbors. Catherine was highly regarded in Meridian—her funeral was attended by the mayor (who was also a [[pallbearer]]), a city councilman, two judges, and every member of the Meridian police force. {{ref|addict3}}


In September 1947, at the age of 17, he was ordained a [[Southern Baptist Convention|Southern Baptist]] minister and moved to [[Cleveland, Tennessee]], to attend Bob Jones College (now [[Bob Jones University]] in [[Greenville, South Carolina]]).<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="CSM"/> A combination of Phelps's refusal of the West Point appointment (which his father had worked hard to obtain), his abandonment of his father's beloved Methodist faith, and his father's remarriage to a divorced woman (Phelps would later become an outspoken critic of divorce) precipitated a lifelong estrangement from his father and stepmother—and by some accounts, from his sister as well. Phelps apparently never spoke to his family members again, and returned all of their letters and birthday cards, as well as Christmas gifts for his children, unopened.<ref>{{cite news|last=Taschler|first=Joe|author2=Steve Fry|url=http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps14.shtml|title=Phelps at odds with father, sister|publisher=CJOnline|date=August 3, 1994|access-date=March 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031122060832/http://www.cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps14.shtml|archive-date=November 22, 2003}}</ref>
Shortly after his mother's death, his maternal great-aunt, Irene Jordan, moved in with the family and became a [[surrogacy|surrogate mother]]; she was killed in a motor vehicle accident in 1950, shortly before Fred's twenty-first birthday.{{ref|addict3}}


Phelps dropped out of Bob Jones College in 1948.<ref name="TCJ">[http://cjonline.com/news/local/2014-03-20/phelps-life-turned-brilliance-hatred# Phelps' life turned from brilliance to hatred], ''Topeka Capital Journal'', March 20, 2014 (archives search); retrieved September 28, 2016.</ref> He moved to [[California]] and became a [[street preacher]] while attending [[Pasadena City College#School history|John Muir College]] in [[Pasadena, California|Pasadena]]. The June 11, 1951 issue of ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine included a story on Phelps, who lectured fellow students about "sins committed on campus by students and teachers", including "promiscuous petting, evil language, profanity, cheating, teachers' filthy jokes in classrooms, and pandering to the lusts of the flesh." When the college ordered him to stop, citing a California law that forbade the teaching of religion on any public school campus, he moved his sermons across the street.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,814897,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071224172403/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,814897,00.html|archive-date=December 24, 2007|title=Religion: Repentance In Pasadena|date=June 11, 1951|magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]]|access-date=December 10, 2012}} (behind subscription wall)</ref> In October 1951, Phelps met Margie Marie Simms in [[Arizona]] and married her in May 1952.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="splcenter2001"/>
Friends and enemies alike recall the young Fred Phelps as a bright, quiet young man; those asked seem to unanimously agree that he was fairly well liked in [[high school]], despite not being very sociable (something to which Phelps himself admits). Friends further recall that Phelps had tendencies to be overbearing and arrogant. By Phelps's own admission, he never dated, and had no interest in members of the opposite sex. He played in the school band ([[cornet]], later switching to [[Serpent (instrument)|bass horn]]), was on the track team (he specialized in [[hurdling]]), and worked as a field reporter for the high school newspaper. Also, during his time in high school he became a [[Golden Gloves]] [[boxing|boxer]], going to state twice and winning by [[Knockout|KO]] both times. In his graduation-year yearbook, his classmates predicted that he would end up as a professional boxer. {{ref|addict3}} Ironically, his boxing ability would become the subject of one of his most infamous quotes, when he would later advocate [[spousal abuse]] as being Biblical.


In 1954, Phelps, his pregnant wife, and their newborn son moved to [[Topeka, Kansas]], where he was hired by the East Side Baptist Church as an associate pastor. The following year, the church's leadership opened Westboro Baptist Church on the other side of town, and Phelps became its pastor.<ref name="fate">{{cite news|title=Fate, timing kept Phelps in Topeka|first1=Joe|last1=Taschler|last2=Fry|first2=Steve|url=http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps13.shtml|newspaper=Topeka Capital-Journal|date=August 3, 1994|access-date=September 13, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120927070336/http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps13.shtml|archive-date=September 27, 2012}}</ref>
===Conversion===
Throughout the course of his time in high school, Phelps was groomed to go into the military; upon his graduation (sixth in a class of over 200), he was accepted into the [[United States Military Academy]] in [[West Point, New York|West Point]], [[New York]], though because he graduated early at the age of sixteen, he would have to wait a year before attending. {{ref|addict3}} In the interim, Phelps waited around Meridian for the time to come to ship out. He became close friends with another boy, John Capron, with whom he spent most of his time. Fred introduced John to his sister Martha-Jean, and the two began dating; they would eventually marry. {{ref|addict3}}


Although the new church was ostensibly [[Independent Baptist]], Phelps preached a doctrine very similar to that of the [[Primitive Baptists]], who believe in scriptural literalism — that Christian biblical scripture is literally true — and that only a predetermined number of people selected for redemption before the world was created will be saved on [[Judgment Day]].<ref name="TCJ"/> His vitriolic preaching alienated church leaders and most of the original congregation, who either returned to East Side Baptist or joined other congregations, leaving him with a small following consisting almost entirely of his own relatives and close friends.<ref>[https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/9-things-you-should-know-about-fred-phelps-and-westboro-baptist-church 9 Things You Should Know About Fred Phelps and Westboro Baptist Church]. thegospelcoalition.org (March 14, 2009), retrieved October 3, 2016.</ref>
In the spring or summer of 1946, Phelps and Capron attended a revival at East End Methodist Church in Meridian. According to friends of Phelps and Capron, the two boys took more interest in the sermon than anyone else in attendance; Joe Clay Hamilton, a high school classmate of Fred's, would recall years later: "The two of them got religion. Both Phelps and Capron became very excited about religion. They couldn't distinguish reality from idealism."{{ref|addict3}}


Phelps was forced to support himself selling vacuum cleaners, baby strollers, and insurance; later, some of his 13 children were reportedly compelled to sell candy door-to-door for several hours each day. In 1972, two companies sued Westboro Baptist for failing to pay for the candy being peddled by the children.<ref name="splcenter2001"/>
The sermon which Phelps credits with "awakening" him to his current theology is one which is considered to be relatively tame and devoid of any overt aggression: Christ inviting all men to come into God's service, likening the afterlife and God to a rich man who has made a great banquet and invites many to come dine with him. After the sermon, Phelps, according to Rev. B.H. McAllister, the [[Baptist]] minister who would eventually [[ordination|ordain]] him, became a religious [[zealot]], full of rage and fiery hatred, and developed [[Eccentricity (behavior)|eccentric]] tendencies. McAllister recalled in an interview with the ''[[Topeka Capital-Journal]]'' in 1993 that there was some difficulty in ordaining Phelps:


==Legal career==
: Phelps considered the local church to be more than a place of fellowship--for him, membership in the local congregation directly corresponded to membership in the Body of Christ. Phelps may have conceded the point to be ordained, but, for forty years, his family and church members in Topeka have been controlled by his threat that, if they depart his congregation, they must carry a letter of permission from him. In addition, they must join a congregation that he approves. Otherwise...the pastor Phelps draws up the dreaded missive ordering the straying sheep to be "delivered to Satan for the destruction of the flesh." {{ref|mcinterview}}
===Civil rights cases===


====Early civil rights career====
Fred's sister recalled her brother's sudden change as being quite grim: "Fred, bless his heart, just went overboard. If you didn't accept it, he was going to cram it down your throat." {{ref|interviewsis}}
Phelps earned a law degree from [[Washburn University]] in 1964, and founded the Phelps Chartered law firm.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps16.shtml|title=Phelps' Law Career Checkered|work=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|access-date=December 10, 2012|last1=Taschler|first1=Joe|last2=Fry|first2=Steve|date=August 3, 1994|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130101115350/http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps16.shtml|archive-date=January 1, 2013}}</ref> However, in 1969, upon a finding of professional misconduct, authorities suspended him from practicing as a lawyer for two years.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />


Phelps' second notable cases were related to [[civil rights]], and his involvement in civil rights cases in and around Kansas gained him praise from local African-American leaders.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
===Family estrangement===
In January 1947, Phelps dropped out of West Point before attending a single class, a move that Martha-Jean recalls devastated their father beyond consolation. The same year, Fred Wade Phelps remarried, this time to a thirty-nine-year-old divorcee named Olive Briggs (Fred Wade was fifty-seven at the time). Phelps stopped speaking to his father, citing Biblical restrictions on marrying divorcees. He also broke off contact with his sister, who supported their father's decision to marry Briggs. Olive's sister recalled to the ''[[Topeka Capital-Journal]]'' in 1994: "Olive would say he grieved over that every day of his life. That he never would have parted ways. It was his son who parted ways." {{ref|briggs}}


"I systematically brought down the [[Jim Crow]] laws of this town", he claimed.<ref name="lauerman1999">{{cite magazine|url=https://www.motherjones.com/politics/1999/03/man-who-loves-hate|title=The Man Who Loves To Hate|last=Lauerman|first=Kerry|date=March–April 1999|magazine=[[Mother Jones (magazine)|Mother Jones]]|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref> Phelps' daughter [[Shirley Phelps-Roper]]<!--which one??--> was quoted as saying, "We took on the Jim Crow establishment, and Kansas did not take that sitting down. They used to shoot our car windows out, screaming we were nigger lovers." She added that the Phelps law firm made up one-third of the state's federal docket of civil rights cases.<ref name="ocweekly1999">{{cite news|first=Donna|last=Ladd|url=http://www.ocweekly.com/1999-09-16/news/a-love-hate-thing/|title=A Love/Hate Thing|newspaper=[[OC Weekly]]|publisher=[[Voice Media]]|location=Long Beach, California|date=September 9, 1999|access-date=December 10, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121130235001/http://www.ocweekly.com/1999-09-16/news/a-love-hate-thing/|archive-date=November 30, 2012}}</ref>
Phelps' sister recalls, "Dad never really got over it." {{ref|interviewsis}} She also remembers Fred Wade Phelps telling her that every year, Phelps returned [[Christmas]] cards unopened; one year, Fred Wade sent photos of himself and Olive to Fred's children, only to have the photos returned cut into pieces. {{ref|addict4}}


Phelps took cases on behalf of African-American clients alleging [[racial discrimination]] by school systems, and a predominantly black [[American Legion]] post which had been raided by police, alleging racially based police abuse.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Swenson|first=Scott|title=Fred Phelps Returns: Judgment Day|journal=[[The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide]]|date=2010|volume=17|issue=5|url=http://www.glreview.com/article.php?articleid=256|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120114172331/http://www.glreview.com/article.php?articleid=256|archive-date=January 14, 2012}}</ref> Phelps' law firm obtained settlements for some clients.<ref name="taschler1994">{{cite news|first1=Joe|last1=Taschler|first2=Steve|last2=Fry|title=As a lawyer, Phelps was good in court|date=August 3, 1994|newspaper=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|url=http://www.cjonline.com:80/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps17.shtml|publisher=[[GateHouse Media]]|location=Topeka, Kansas|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030720111243/http://www.cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps17.shtml|archive-date=July 20, 2003|access-date=July 20, 2003}}</ref>
Fred would only see his father one last time, in the late 1960s/early 1970s; the only Phelps children to meet him were Mark and Fred Jr; Mark, Nate, and Dorothy claim they never knew their grandfather's name until the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' ran an article in 1994. Mark would later recall his only memory of his grandfather was seeing Fred Wade sobbing on a train platform as Fred Phelps told him to never come back, write, or call; around the same time, Phelps' sister arrived to try and reconcile father and son. Mark recalls coming home from school one day to see a woman running crying away from the house, getting into a car, and driving away. He would only learn years later that the woman had been his aunt. It was the last time that Fred Phelps would see or have any kind of communication with his sister, who was still alive as of 1995. {{ref|addict4}} She and John Capron spent most of the 1950s through the 1970s in [[Eastern Europe]], as part of a [[Baptist]] [[mission]] that worked smuggling [[Bible]]s into [[communism|communist]] countries. When John Capron died in the late 1970s/1980s, Fred Phelps was invited to the funeral, but did not come. {{ref|addict3}}


====''Johnson v. Topeka Board of Education'', et. al.====
Fred Wade died in 1977, according to his friends and family, "a man at peace." Those who met Fred Wade later in life were never aware that he had a son, and only learned such when approached in the early 1990s by the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' for interviews. Of the property he left to Fred and Martha-Jean in his will, Martha-Jean was ordered to receive seven-eighths. Phelps attended the funeral, alone. His children recall him reacting badly to news of his father's death. {{ref|rift}}


Phelps' national notoriety first came from a 1973 lawsuit (settled in 1978) on behalf of a 10-year-old African-American plaintiff, Evelyn Renee Johnson (some sources say Evelyn ''Rene'' Johnson), against the [[Topeka, Kansas|Topeka]] Board of Education (which had, in 1954, famously lost the pivotal racial discrimination case of ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]],'' ending legal racial segregation in U.S. public schools), and against related local, state and federal officials. In the 1973 case, Phelps argued that the Topeka Board of Education, in violation of the 1954 ruling, had not yet made its schools equal, and by attending Topeka's east-side, predominantly minority schools, the black plaintiff had received an inferior education.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="new_suit_1973_10_23_nytimes_com">Ayres, B. Drummond: [https://www.nytimes.com/1973/10/23/archives/nearly-20-years-after-landmark-court-case-new-suit-charges-topeka.html "New Suit Charges Topeka Schools Still Discriminate Racially,"] October 23, 1973, ''[[New York Times]],'' [[Optical character recognition|OCR]] text retrieved from the ''New York Times'' print archive, August 26, 2020</ref><ref name="twenty_years_1974_06_usccr">[https://books.google.com/books?id=w77DdV_RigoC&pg=PA17&lpg=PA17 ''Twenty Years After Brown: The shadows of the past:''] A report of the [[U.S. Commission on Civil Rights]], June 1974, p.17, footnote #15, retrieved from [[Harvard Law Library]] copy, as reproduced in [[Google Books]]' photocopy, August 26, 2020</ref>
Despite Martha-Jean's conviction that Fred developed what could be considered a palpable hatred of their father and a strong conviction that he would go to [[Hell]], a tearful Fred Phelps recalled in 1994:


Initially, Phelps attempted to file the case as a [[class action]], in the U.S. District Court for Kansas. Asking the court to order an end to the alleged discrimination and suggesting that busing might be at least one remedy, Phelps also sought $100 million in actual damages, plus another $100 million in punitive damages—or, alternatively, $20,000 for each of the 10,000 students he claimed were in the aggrieved class of victims.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="new_suit_1973_10_23_nytimes_com" /> Nevertheless, the federal district and appellate courts denied the class action filing, limiting the case to Phelps's initial plaintiff, Evelyn Johnson, alone.<ref name="settlement_1979_04_18_gardencity_telegram">[https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/1631454/ "School Settlement,"] April 18, 1979, ''[[Garden City Telegram]],'' [[Garden City, Kansas]], [[Optical character recognition|OCR]] text retrieved from [[Newspapers.com]] August 26, 2020</ref>
: He was disappointed when I didn't go to West Point, which is understandable. He worked hard to get that appointment for me, and he was a very active Methodist, so he was disappointed in that. But my dad was a super guy that I loved deeply and I miss him. {{ref|phelpsview}}


The case fueled a national debate about [[racial integration]] of schools,<ref name="integration_1973_10_28_nytimes_com">[https://www.nytimes.com/1973/10/28/archives/fighting-an-old-war-on-same-front-school-integration-the-nation-a.html "School Integration,"] October 28, 1973, ''[[New York Times]],'' [[Optical character recognition|OCR]] text retrieved from the ''New York Times'' print archive, August 26, 2020</ref> and prompted the U.S. [[Department of Health, Education and Welfare]], by 1974, to order the Topeka board to develop corrective remedies.<ref name="twenty_years_1974_06_usccr" />
Olive died in 1985, which Fred Phelps says overjoyed him; he was not invited to, or mentioned in, her funeral service; Olive's [[obituary]] mentioned that she was survived by "one stepdaughter." In addition, Olive left all of her money and possessions to Martha-Jean. {{ref|addict4}} Included in the estate were 75 [[acre]]s (304,000 m²) of land, a house, and an undisclosed sum of tax-free money.


Topeka's school board did not contest the charges. On the guidance of its insurance provider, it settled the litigation (with no admission of wrongdoing) for $19,500—$12,400 of which went to Phelps. While the settlement drew some praise, controversy arose when the judge ordered the settlement amount sealed at the request of the insurer—apparently with Phelps's approval. (Details leaked out to the media anyway.) Phelps announced he would file more such cases, as class actions, but the insurance company stated it would not pay for any more of them.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="new_suit_1973_10_23_nytimes_com" /><ref name="settlement_1979_04_18_gardencity_telegram" /><ref name="explanations_1979_04_17_manhattan_mercury">[https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/424063700/ "Explanations badly needed,"] editorial, April 17, 1979, ''[[Manhattan Mercury]],'' [[Manhattan, Kansas]], [[Optical character recognition|OCR]] text retrieved from [[Newspapers.com]] August 26, 2020</ref>
===Early career/marriage===
Phelps left [[Mississippi]] for [[Bob Jones University]]. While there, he was part of an unsuccessful mission to convert [[Mormons]] in the town of [[Vernal, Utah]]. It was one of the earliest examples of Fred's newfound personality: When one of the missionaries choked during a question and answer session, Phelps responded by attacking the questioner, sparking a near riot. {{ref|addict3}} While in Vernal, Phelps was ordained a minister by the local Baptist Church; he returned to Bob Jones, only to mysteriously drop out. Years later, he cited an opposition to the school's racial practices (blacks were not allowed to attend until the 1960s); in 1994, a former employee of the university told the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' that the school staff actually feared Phelps, and he was given an ultimatum either to seek psychiatric counseling or be expelled. {{ref|addict3}}


====Later civil rights career====
Phelps moved to [[Canada]], where he attended [[Prairie Bible Institute]] in [[Three Hills]] for two semesters before dropping out and moving to [[Pasadena, California]], where he received a two-year degree in [[theology]] from [[John Muir Junior College]] in 1951. {{ref|addict3}} The same year, Phelps received national attention for the first time when he was featured in an article in [[Time Magazine]] for his street-ministry efforts to outlaw [[kiss]]ing on campuses in the Pasadena city limits. Phelps also sought to outlaw profanity, which would become a staple of his sermons in later years. The campaign ended in violence: Police had to escort Phelps off of a campus and put him into protective custody after students tried to attack him. He returned to the campus again, and was told by police that he did not have permission to demonstrate there. When Phelps refused to leave, the officer attempted to remove him by force, and Phelps [[assault]]ed him, leading to his first arrest. He continued his street ministry from the front lawn of a sympathizer who lived across the street from John Muir College.{{ref|addict3}}


In 1986, Phelps sued President [[Ronald Reagan]] over Reagan's appointment of a U.S. ambassador to the [[Holy See|Vatican]], alleging this violated [[separation of church and state]]. The case was dismissed by the U.S. district court.<ref name="taschler1994"/><ref>{{cite court|url=https://www.justice.gov/osg/briefs/1986/sg860401.txt|litigants=American Baptist Churches in the U.S.A., et al., Petitioners v. Ronald W. Reagan, President of the United States of America, et al.|year=1986|access-date=December 10, 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121015002003/http://www.justice.gov/osg/briefs/1986/sg860401.txt|archive-date=October 15, 2012}}</ref>
Shortly thereafter, Phelps moved to [[Tucson, Arizona]], where he was taken in by a family. Years later they recalled him as "the perfect guest": during his stay, he helped to add a room onto the house and did all of the family's yard work. The family's [[nanny]], Margerie, is the only woman to whom Phelps has ever been romantically linked: They were married in May 1952. Their first child, Fred Jr., was born [[May 4]] [[1953]].


Phelps' law firm, staffed by himself and family members, also represented non-white Kansans in discrimination actions against [[Kansas City Power and Light]], [[Southwestern Bell]], and the Topeka City Attorney, and represented two female professors alleging discrimination at Kansas universities.<ref name="ocweekly1999"/>
===Arrival in Topeka===
About a year after Fred Jr.'s birth, the family moved to [[Topeka, Kansas]], where Fred Sr. had been invited by Pastor Leaford Cavin to be his co-pastor at Eastside Baptist Church, a traditional conservative [[Baptist]] congregation with none of the views or practices that would later characterize Phelps. The Phelps family arrived on [[May 17]] [[1954]], the same day that the [[United States Supreme Court]] handed down its decision on ''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]''. Fred Sr. would later claim that he took this as a sign from God that he should become a lawyer. {{ref|phelpsview}}


A defeat in his civil rights suit against the City of [[Wichita, Kansas|Wichita]] and others, on behalf of Jesse O. Rice (the fired executive director of the [[Wichita Civil Rights Equal Employment Opportunity Commission]]), among other causes, would lead to further legal actions ending in Phelps' disbarment and censure.{{clarify|date=January 2018}}<ref name="phelps_669_F_Supp_1047_leagle_com">{{cite court|url=https://www.leagle.com/decision/1981808637F2d171_1792/IN%20THE%20MATTER%20OF%20DISCIPLINARY%20PROCEEDINGS%20OF%20PHELPS|title=In the Matter of Fred W. PHELPS Sr., Respondent|number=85-212|volume=669 F.Supp. 1047|court=United States District Court, D.|location=Kansas|date=September 11, 1987|via=Leagle.com|access-date=May 11, 2017}}</ref><ref name="phelps_637_F_2d_171_leagle_com">[https://www.leagle.com/decision/1981808637F2d171_1792/IN%20THE%20MATTER%20OF%20DISCIPLINARY%20PROCEEDINGS%20OF%20PHELPS "In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings of PHELPS No. 81-1022"], 637 F_2d 171 (1981), as transcribed at Leagle.com; retrieved May 11, 2017</ref>
Fred's position at Eastside was shortlived; as some congregants would recall years later, he was a "[[reverend]] from Hell." Almost immediately his sermons exhibited the hate-filled spirit which would later characterize his ministry. For example, as a means of encouraging the wives and children to "submit to the father's authority in the home," Phelps began encouraging his congregants to beat them if necessary; he was once forced to [[bail]] one of his parishioners out of jail after counseling the man to punch his wife in the face until she became "subjugated." Parishioners of Eastside recall one of Phelps' sermons in particular (which ironically references his high-school boxing talent):


In the 1980s, Phelps received awards from the [[Kansas City metropolitan area|Greater Kansas City]] Chapter of Blacks in Government and the [[Bonner Springs, Kansas|Bonner Springs]] branch of the [[NAACP]], for his work on behalf of black clients.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref name="taschler1994"/>
: A good left hook makes for a right fine wife. Brethren, they can lock us up, but we'll still do what the Bible tells us to do. Either our wives are going to obey, or we're going to beat them! {{ref|sermon}}


One of his sons, [[Nate Phelps|Nate]], stated that Phelps largely took civil rights cases for money rather than principle. Nate said that his father "held racist attitudes" and he would use slurs against black clients: "They would come into his office and after they left, he would talk about how stupid they were and call them dumb niggers." Nate's sister, [[Shirley Phelps-Roper|Shirley]], denies his account and states their father never used racist language.<ref>{{cite web|first=John|last=Blake|url=http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/05/05/hate.preacher/index.html|title='Most-hated', anti-gay preacher once fought for civil rights|website=[[CNN]]|publisher=[[Turner Broadcasting System]]|location=Atlanta, Georgia|date=May 5, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100506031526/http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/05/05/hate.preacher/index.html|archive-date=May 6, 2010}}</ref>
The congregants, when asked by the ''[[Topeka Capital-Journal]]'' in interviews years later, recalled an incident one Sunday morning when Phelps' infant son, Mark, began to squirm during a sermon; Phelps responded by repeatedly punching the baby in the face. Afterwards, several men of the congregation confronted Phelps about the attack. {{ref|addict4}}


===Disbarment===
Phelps' dismissal from the church came when a female congregant admitted that she had committed adultery. The next Sunday, Phelps' sermon revolved around the woman, repeatedly referring to her as a whore and encouraging the congregation to draw up an official "form" declaring her to be damned to Hell and excommunicated from the church (a tactic he would later adopt frequently). Instead, the congregants voted to kick ''Phelps'' out of the church.
A formal complaint was filed against Phelps on November 8, 1977, by the Kansas State Board of Law Examiners, due to his conduct during a lawsuit, against a court reporter named Carolene Brady, who had failed to have a court transcript ready for Phelps on the day he asked for it. Although it did not affect the outcome of the case, Phelps sued her for $22,000.<ref name="google1979">{{cite web|url=https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=16353368333889772229|title=State v. Phelps, 598 P. 2d 180 – Kan: Supreme Court 1979|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref><ref name="openjurist1">{{citation|url=http://openjurist.org/662/f2d/649/phelps-v-kansas-supreme-court|title=662 F2d 649 Phelps v. Kansas Supreme Court|volume=F2d|issue=662|page=649|access-date=December 10, 2012|last1=Tenth Circuit}}</ref>


In the ensuing trial, Phelps called Brady to the stand, declared her a [[hostile witness]], and then [[cross-examination|cross-examined]] her for nearly a week, during which he accused her of being a "[[slut]]", tried to introduce testimony from former boyfriends whom Phelps wanted to [[subpoena]], and accused her of a variety of perverse sexual acts, ultimately reducing her to tears on the stand.<ref name="google1979"/><ref name="openjurist1"/>
Today, Phelps maintains that he left willingly because Cavin was not staunch enough of a Baptist. However, at least one Eastside congregant remembers it differently:


Phelps lost the case. According to the [[Kansas Supreme Court]]:
: Theological differences? Brother Cavin was a very staunch Baptist. I don't know if there ever was a man more strict than Leaford Cavin. Really, it was the anger in Fred, not doctrine, that caused him to act the way he did. {{ref|unknown}}


{{blockquote|The trial became an exhibition of a personal vendetta by Phelps against Carolene Brady. His examination was replete with repetition, badgering, innuendo, belligerence, irrelevant and immaterial matter, evidencing only a desire to hurt and destroy the defendant. The jury verdict didn't stop the onslaught of Phelps. He was not satisfied with the hurt, pain, and damage he had visited on Carolene Brady.<ref name="google1979"/><ref name="openjurist1"/>}}
Several congregants chose to stand by Phelps and left Eastside with him. However, following an incident in which Phelps shotgunned to death a German Shepherd that had wandered into his unfenced yard {{ref|addict4}}, the majority of Phelps' initial supporters left and returned to Eastside.


In an appeal, Phelps prepared [[affidavit]]s swearing to the court that he had eight witnesses whose testimony would convince the court to rule in his favor. Brady obtained sworn, signed affidavits from those eight people in question, all of whom said that Phelps had never contacted them and that they had no reason to testify against Brady.<ref name="google1979"/><ref name="openjurist1"/>
Those who remained with Phelps included George Stutzman, the Davis family and the Hockenbarger family, the [[patriarch]] of which, Charles William (called Bill by fellow congregants), was allegedly a member of the [[Christian Identity]] sect of the [[Ku Klux Klan]] and a long-time friend of Phelps; these would become the founding members of [[Westboro Baptist Church]] in 1955.


Phelps was found to have made "false statements in violation of DR 7–102(A)(5)". On July 20, 1979, Phelps was permanently disbarred from practicing law in the state of Kansas, although he continued to practice in federal courts.<ref name="google1979"/><ref name="openjurist1"/><ref name="phelps_669_F_Supp_1047_leagle_com"/><ref name="phelps_637_F_2d_171_leagle_com"/>
===Alleged abuse and abusiveness===
Phelps graduated from [[Washburn University]] in 1962, attending classes while maintaining his pastoral duties at Westboro.


In 1985, nine Federal judges filed a disciplinary complaint against Phelps and five of his children, alleging false accusations against the judges. In 1989, the complaint was settled; Phelps agreed to stop practicing law in Federal court permanently, and two of his children were suspended for a period of six months and one year, respectively.<ref name="phelps_669_F_Supp_1047_leagle_com"/><ref name="phelps_637_F_2d_171_leagle_com"/><ref name="splcenter2001">{{citation|url=http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2001/spring/a-city-held-hostage/fred-phelps-timel|title=Fred Phelps Timeline|work=[[Southern Poverty Law Center]]|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
Sometime following his graduation from Washburn, Phelps became addicted to [[amphetamines]] and [[barbiturates]], which he often combined with large quantities of alcohol. {{ref|addict4}} One of his sons claims that his first memory in life was that of the drunk, stoned Phelps shooting a dog for defecating on the lawn (see above) {{ref|addict4}}{{ref|addict2}}, the incident which led to the majority of Phelps' supporters leaving him and returning to Eastside. The owner [[Lawsuit|sued]] Phelps, but Phelps defended himself in court and won. In the middle of the night, for the next several weeks, his ex-congregants sneaked into the front yard of Westboro and placed signs reading: ''Anyone who'd stoop to killing a dog someday will mistake a child for a dog.'' {{ref|addict4}}


==Family life==
Phelps continued to take drugs, consume alcohol, and binge eat for six years, and would often go for days or weeks without leaving his bedroom. When Phelps did leave his room, it was to throw temper tantrums, during which he would throw food, break plates, and scream at his children for not eating. When Phelps was then too exhausted to continue his fit, he would take his wife back to their room for sex while the children cleaned up after him. Son Mark recalls:
Phelps married Margie M. Simms in May 1952, a year after the couple met at the Arizona Bible Institute. They had 13 children, 54 grandchildren, and 7 great-grandchildren.<ref name="NYT">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/21/us/fred-phelps-founder-of-westboro-baptist-church-dies-at-84.html|title=Fred Phelps, Anti-Gay Preacher Who Targeted Military Funerals, Dies at 84|date=March 20, 2014|access-date=March 21, 2014|last=Paulson|first=Michael |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref>


[[Nathan Phelps]], Fred Phelps' estranged son, claims that the elder Phelps was an [[child abuse|abusive]] father, that he (Nate) never had a relationship with him when he was growing up, and that the Westboro Baptist Church is an organization for his father to "vent his rage and anger."<ref name="anderson2006">{{cite news|first=Ric|last=Anderson|url=http://cjonline.com/stories/072306/loc_phelps.shtml|title=Phelps' Son Speaks Out|newspaper=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|date=July 23, 2006|access-date=January 20, 2013|archive-date=September 29, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929095543/http://cjonline.com/stories/072306/loc_phelps.shtml}}</ref> He alleges that, in addition to hurting others, his father used to physically abuse his wife and children by beating them with his fists and with the handle of a [[mattock]] to the point of bleeding.<ref name="anderson2006"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/03/16/westboro.nate.phelps/index.html|title=Estranged Son of Anti-Gay Westboro Pastor Says Father Does 'Evil'|date=March 17, 2011|work=[[CNN]]|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref> Phelps' brother, Mark, has supported and repeated Nathan's claims of physical abuse by their father.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/the-new-fred/Content?oid=2183486|title=The New Fred|last=Kendall|first=Justin|date=November 2, 2006|work=[[The Pitch (newspaper)|The Pitch]]|access-date=January 20, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121226164820/http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/the-new-fred/Content?oid=2183486|archive-date=December 26, 2012}}</ref> Since 2004, over 20 members of the church, mostly family members, have left the church.<ref name="KCStar11212012">{{cite news|first=Dugan|last=Arnett|url=http://www.kansascity.com/2011/11/19/3275645/megan-phelps-roper-an-heir-to.html|title=Megan Phelps-Roper of Westboro Baptist Church: An heir to hate|newspaper=[[Kansas City Star]]|date=November 21, 2012|access-date=March 21, 2014}}</ref>
: It established a life habit for me. Even today, the moment I get home, I'm thinking 'Is Daddy mad?' Our walls were stained with food. And my mom used to cry because she couldn't keep good dishes. My father would also bust holes in the walls and doors. If they were on the outside, he'd fix them quickly. On the inside, he'd leave them unrepaired for months. {{ref|markview}}


==Religious beliefs==
Because of his habits, Phelps stopped earning money for the family, and because he refused to allow his wife to get a job, the family's financial resources quickly dried up. Phelps's binge eating pushed his weight to nearly 300 pounds.
[[Image:WestboroBaptistChurch Opening.png|thumb|Advertisement for opening service of Westboro Baptist Church, ''[[Topeka Capital-Journal|Topeka Capital]]'', 1955]]
Phelps described himself as an [[Primitive Baptists|Old School Baptist]], and stated that he held to all [[five points of Calvinism]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/faq.html|title=Westboro Baptist Church FAQ, Question 1|publisher=Godhatesfags.com|access-date=July 9, 2010}}</ref> Phelps particularly highlighted [[John Calvin]]'s doctrine of [[unconditional election]], the belief that God has elected certain people for salvation before birth, and [[limited atonement]], the belief that Christ only died for the elect, and condemns those who believe otherwise.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/sermons/outlines/Sermon_20071230.pdf|title=Sermon Outline for Dec. 30, 2007|date=December 30, 2007|access-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327111518/http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/sermons/outlines/Sermon_20071230.pdf|archive-date=March 27, 2009}}</ref> Despite claiming to be an Old School Baptist, he was ordained by a [[Southern Baptist Convention|Southern Baptist church]], and was rejected and generally condemned by Old School (or Primitive) Baptists.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ydr.com/living/ci_16259961|title=The gospel according to Fred Phelps|publisher=The York Daily Record|date=February 24, 2014|access-date=March 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140323210017/http://www.ydr.com/living/ci_16259961|archive-date=March 23, 2014}}</ref>


Phelps viewed [[Arminianism]] (particularly the views of the [[Methodist]] theologian William Elbert Munsey) as a "worse [[blasphemy]] and [[heresy]] than that heard in all filthy Saturday night fag bars in the aggregate in the world".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/sermons/outlines/Sermon_20080907.pdf|title=Sermon Outline, September 7, 2008|date=September 7, 2008|access-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327111442/http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/sermons/outlines/Sermon_20080907.pdf|archive-date=March 27, 2009}}</ref>
During this time the family's only income came from what Phelps called "The Children's Crusade," a money-making scheme disguised as evangelical witnessing and a church fundraiser, which consisted of the Phelps children going door-to-door selling [[candy]]. Phelps assigned the children quotas, and those who didn't meet the quotas were beaten with a [[mattock]] handle, a farming tool possessing twice the density of a [[baseball bat]]. {{ref|addict5}} The sales often found the children in dangerous areas of town, including the "bad part of Kansas City," where a teenage Jon Phelps and eight-year-old Rebecca Phelps were assaulted by a [[transgender]] woman after Jon Phelps "held forth with the latest 'fag' joke making the rounds at his junior high." The transgender woman pulled a [[switchblade]] and chased the children; they ran into an [[alley]], were trapped, and, as sister Margie recalls, "Jonathon Phelps got 'bitch-slapped' by a guy in a dress to teach him a lesson." {{ref|margieview}}


In addition to [[John Calvin]], Phelps admired [[Martin Luther]] and [[Bob Jones Sr.]], and approvingly quoted a statement by Jones that "what this country needs is 50 [[Jonathan Edwards (theologian)|Jonathan Edwardses]] turned loose in it."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mars-hill-forum.com/forumdoc/m070opgu.html|title=Debate with John Rankin, opening statement|publisher=Mars-hill-forum.com|access-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080807155240/http://www.mars-hill-forum.com/forumdoc/m070opgu.html|archive-date=August 7, 2008}}</ref> Phelps particularly held to [[equal ultimacy]], believing that "God Almighty makes some willing and he leads others into sin", a view he said is [[Calvinism|Calvinist]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mars-hill-forum.com/forumdoc/m070quest.html|title=Debate with John Rankin, Q&A session|publisher=Mars-hill-forum.com|access-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081014225625/http://www.mars-hill-forum.com/forumdoc/m070quest.html|archive-date=October 14, 2008}}</ref>
The youngest child Tim "Timmy" Phelps consistently sold the most candy, "by being cute," his sister Margie recalls. {{ref|margieview}} He would stand around town and act out a routine in which he took on the persona of a [[carnival]] barker. He was once seen by a talent scout, who put Timmy into a commercial for [[Payless Shoes]]. Timmy also earned money by going to a restaurant whose owner felt sorry for what Phelps was forcing the boy to do; the owner never failed to buy every candy bar that Timmy had on him, and to give the boy free food and drinks.{{ref|addict5}}


Phelps opposed such common Baptist practices as [[Sunday school]] meetings, Bible colleges and seminaries, and multi-denominational crusades.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/wbcinfo/memoonthechurch.pdf|title=Memo on the Church|access-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090419130119/http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/wbcinfo/memoonthechurch.pdf|archive-date=April 19, 2009}}</ref> Although he attended Bob Jones University, and worked with [[Billy Graham]] in his Los Angeles Crusade before Graham changed his views on a literal [[Hell]] and salvation, Phelps considered Graham the greatest [[false prophet]] since [[Balaam]]. He also condemned large church leaders, such as [[Robert Schuller]] and [[Jerry Falwell]], as well as all [[Catholicism|Catholics]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/sermons/outlines/Sermon_20070617.pdf|title=Sermon Outline, June 17, 2007|access-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327111536/http://www.godhatesfags.com/written/sermons/outlines/Sermon_20070617.pdf|archive-date=March 27, 2009}}</ref>
In 1993, during research that the Topeka Capital-Journal was conducting for a story on Phelps, they discovered that Phelps had obtained the candy by [[False billing|defrauding]] the manufacturer.{{ref|addict5}} As of 1994, Phelps had lost two lawsuits to the manufacturer and was ordered to pay them an amount in excess of $125,000 [[USD]] (= 103, 101 €). A representative of the manufacturer told the Topeka Capital Journal in 1994 that they were attempting to find Phelps' bank account to place a [[lien]] against it, but had been unsuccessful.{{ref|addict5}} It is unknown whether or not Phelps has ever paid the manufacturer.


==Church protest activities==
Eventually, candy sales dried up, but Phelps was insistent that money keep coming in from them. In order to avoid beatings, the children began stealing from businesses around town and acting as purse-snatchers. {{ref|addict5}} The children were often caught, with eyewitnesses filing affidavits, but the district attorney refused to prosecute even one case for fear of violent retribution from Phelps. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter5.html] Eventually, the theft became so prominent and so severe that the Topeka Police Department began a special investigation into Phelps under the belief that he was running a "[[Fagin]] operation." {{ref|addict5}}
{{Main|Westboro Baptist Church}}
[[File:Fred Phelps on his pulpit.jpg|thumb|Phelps at his [[pulpit]]]]


All of Phelps' demonstrations and other activities during the last 50 years of his life were conducted in conjunction with the congregation of [[Westboro Baptist Church]] (WBC), an American unaffiliated [[Baptist]] church known for its extreme ideologies, especially those [[Homophobia|against gay people]].<ref>{{cite web|title=God Hates Fags|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/|publisher=Westboro Baptist Church|access-date=June 20, 2010}}
In the mid-1960s Marge Phelps loaded her children into the family car and attempted to flee from Fred, but found that none of her relatives or friends had the resources to accommodate eleven extra people. The family was forced to return to Fred, who promptly brutalized his wife. {{ref|addict4}}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/09/westboro-baptist-church-p_n_350766.html|title=Westboro Baptist Church Protests Outside Obama Girls' School|work=The Huffington Post|date=March 18, 2010|access-date=March 31, 2010|first=Rachel|last=Weiner|ref=none}}
* {{cite news|url=http://www.laweekly.com/2009-02-26/columns/h8ters-l-a-vacation-fred-phelps-146-antigay-baptists-come-out-on-oscar-night/|title=H8ters L.A. Vacation: Fred Phelps' Antigay Baptists Come Out on Oscar Night|last=Mikulan|first=Steven|date=February 25, 2009|work=L.A. Weekly|access-date=May 31, 2009|ref=none|archive-date=August 29, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090829195827/http://www.laweekly.com/2009-02-26/columns/h8ters-l-a-vacation-fred-phelps-146-antigay-baptists-come-out-on-oscar-night/}}
* {{cite news|url=http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=&sc2=news&sc3=&id=88362|title=Phelps Clan Met with Revelry and Frat Boys in Chicago|last=Melloy|first=Kilian|date=March 12, 2009|work=EDGE Boston|access-date=May 31, 2009|ref=none|archive-date=July 10, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110710170644/http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=&sc2=news&sc3=&id=88362}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.timesunion.com/default/article/School-plans-safe-show-554814.php|title=School Plans 'Safe' Show|first=Kenneth C. II|last=Crowe|location=Albany, NY|work=[[Times Union (Albany)|Times Union]]|date=November 14, 2009|access-date=July 1, 2011}}</ref> The church is widely described as a [[hate group]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Westboro Baptist Church |url=http://www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/WBC/default.asp?LEARN_Cat=Extremism&LEARN_SubCat=Extremism_in_America&xpicked=3&item=WBC |publisher=[[Anti-Defamation League]] |access-date=June 20, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100707223315/http://www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/WBC/default.asp?LEARN_Cat=Extremism&LEARN_SubCat=Extremism_in_America&xpicked=3&item=WBC|archive-date=July 7, 2010 }}
* {{Cite news|title=Hate group protests this week|url=http://temple-news.com/2010/03/30/hate-group-protests-this-week|date=March 30, 2010|work=[[The Temple News]]|publisher=[[Temple University]]|location=Philadelphia|access-date=June 30, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100406033316/http://temple-news.com/2010/03/30/hate-group-protests-this-week|archive-date=April 6, 2010}}
* {{cite news|title=Interview with Westboro Baptist Church: Hate in the Name of God|ref=none|url=http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/293364 |date=June 16, 2010|first=W.V.|last=Fitzgerald|work=DigitalJournal.com|access-date=June 20, 2010 }}</ref> and is monitored as such by the [[Anti-Defamation League]] and [[Southern Poverty Law Center]]. It was headed by Phelps until his later years when he took a reduced role in the activities of the church and his family.<ref name="KCStar11212012"/> In March 2014, church representatives said that the church had not had a defined leader in "a very long time,"<ref name="tcj2014">{{cite news|url=http://cjonline.com/news/local/2014-03-16/wbc-founder-fred-waldron-phelps-sr-hospice-spokesman-confirms|title=Son of Fred Phelps Sr. says father voted out of church|newspaper=Topeka Capital-Journal|date=March 16, 2014|access-date=March 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161117222314/http://cjonline.com/news/local/2014-03-16/wbc-founder-fred-waldron-phelps-sr-hospice-spokesman-confirms|archive-date=November 17, 2016}}</ref> and church members consist primarily of his large family;<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref>{{cite news|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2010/US/05/05/hate.preacher/index.html|title={{-'}}Most-hated', anti-gay preacher once fought for civil rights|publisher=CNN|author=John Blake|date=March 14, 2010|access-date=May 20, 2010 }}</ref> in 2011, the church stated that it had about 40 members.<ref name=WBCBlog20111027>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.sparenot.com/workmen/2011/10/27/you-are-still-alive-now-is-the-time-to-repent|title=You Are Still Alive: NOW Is The Time To Repent|date=October 27, 2011|publisher=Westboro Baptist Church|access-date=November 11, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120110104729/http://blogs.sparenot.com/workmen/2011/10/27/you-are-still-alive-now-is-the-time-to-repent|archive-date=January 10, 2012}}</ref> The church is headquartered in a residential neighborhood on the west side of [[Topeka]] about three miles (5&nbsp;km) west of the [[Kansas State Capitol]]. Its first [[Church service|public service]] was held on the afternoon of November 27, 1955.<ref name="date-sermon">{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesamerica.com/sound/ghfsermons/OSBH19880131.mp3|title=Sermon preached by Fred Phelps|year=1987|access-date=January 14, 2012|url-status=usurped|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061208014706/http://www.godhatesamerica.com/sound/ghfsermons/OSBH19880131.mp3|archive-date=December 8, 2006}}</ref>


The church has been involved in actions against [[homosexuality|gay people]] since at least 1991, when it sought a crackdown on homosexual activity at [[Gage Park, Topeka|Gage Park]] six blocks northwest of the church.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref>Jones, K. Ryan (2008), ''Fall from Grace'' (documentary)</ref> In 2001, Phelps estimated that the WBC had held 40 pickets a week for the previous 10 years.<ref>{{citation|year=2001|title=Topeka: A City Bulled into Submission by the Westboro Baptist Church|journal=Intelligence Report|publisher=[[Southern Poverty Law Center]]|issue=101|url=http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2001/spring/a-city-held-hostage}}</ref> In addition to conducting [[Anti-LGBT rhetoric|anti-gay]] protests at military funerals, the organization pickets other celebrity funerals and public events that are likely to gain media attention.<ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /><ref>{{cite news|last=Wing|first=Nick|title=Elizabeth Edwards Funeral To Be Picketed By Westboro Baptist Church|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/09/elizabeth-edwards-funeral-westboro-baptist-church_n_794333.html|newspaper=The Huffington Post|date=December 9, 2010}}</ref> Protests have also been held against [[Jews]],<ref>{{cite news|last1=Sulzberger|first1=A. G.|last2=Moynihan|first2=Colin|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/22/nyregion/22westboro.html|title=Messages of Hate Met by Scorn and Shrugs|work=The New York Times|date=June 21, 2009|access-date=May 20, 2020}}</ref> and some protests have included WBC members [[Flag desecration#United States|stomping]] on the [[flag of the United States|American flag]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Protester arrested for letting son stomp flag|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna19080064|access-date=2021-06-27|website=NBC News|date=June 7, 2007 |language=en}}</ref>
In 1968, Phelps tried to commit [[suicide]] while high on methamphetamines, attempting to shoot himself in the head with a [[shotgun]]; he was so inebriated, however, that he ended up missing his head completely and striking a roll of insulation. {{ref|addict4}} Shortly thereafter, Phelps overdosed on a cocktail of alcohol and amphetamines. {{ref|addict5}} He slipped into a [[coma]] and was rushed to the hospital, where he remained comatose for a week. Upon his return home he put himself on a detoxification diet, drinking only water and eating no solid food for several weeks. {{ref|addict5}} There is no evidence that Phelps has since relapsed.


===Lawsuit against Westboro Baptist Church===
Phelps then decided that his children should be as fanatical about dieting as he was, and began to deny them food and force them to run ten miles a day; the [[marathon (sport)|marathons]] included all of his children, the youngest of whom were six and eight. If anyone beat Phelps in the race, they were beaten. {{ref|addict5}}
{{main|Snyder v. Phelps}}
On March 10, 2006, WBC picketed the funeral of [[United States Marine Corps|Marine]] [[Lance Corporal]] Matthew A. Snyder, who died in combat in [[Iraq]] on March 3, 2006.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-na-funeral-protests9-2010mar09,0,4930374.story|title=Supreme Court to Hear Case on Protests|last=Savage|first=David|date=March 9, 2010|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /> The Snyder family sued Fred Phelps for [[defamation]], [[invasion of privacy]], and [[intentional infliction of emotional distress]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8673839.stm| title=Supreme Court: Kagan's philosophy hard to define|last=Connolly|first=Katie|date=May 10, 2010|work=[[BBC Online]]|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />


On October 31, 2007, WBC, Fred Phelps and his two daughters, Shirley Phelps-Roper and Rebekah Phelps-Davis, were found liable for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress. A federal jury awarded Snyder's father $2.9 million in compensatory damages, then later added a decision to award $6 million in [[punitive damages]] for invasion of privacy and an additional $2 million for causing emotional distress (a total of $10.9 million).<ref>{{cite news|url=http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/topstories/2007-10-31-3928600499_x.htm|title=Jury awards father $11M in funeral case|date=November 1, 2007|work=[[USA Today]]|agency =The Associated Press|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
At the same time, even though he had gone back to being an attorney, Phelps continued to force the children to sell candy. They would do this from 4:00 p.m. until they had either met their quotas or until it was too late to sell, return home, and then run their ten miles; upon returning home, they were then allowed to do their homework and, if Phelps allowed, eat. They usually went to bed at 1:00 a.m.; Phelps would then awaken them at 5:00 a.m. for a run before school. Phelps' fanatical dedication to running earned him articles in ''[[Runner's World]]'' magazine, in the November, 1970 issue and again in November, 1988. {{ref|addict5}}


The lawsuit named Albert Snyder, father of Matthew Snyder, as the plaintiff, and Fred W. Phelps Sr., Westboro Baptist Church, Inc., Rebekah Phelps-Davis, and Shirley Phelps-Roper as defendants, alleging that they were responsible for publishing defamatory information about the Snyder family on the Internet, including statements that Albert and his wife had "raised [Matthew] for [[the devil]]" and taught him "to defy his Creator, to divorce, and to commit [[adultery]]". Other statements denounced them for raising their son Catholic. Snyder further complained the defendants had intruded upon and staged protests at his son's funeral. The claims of invasion of privacy and defamation arising from comments posted about Snyder on the Westboro website were dismissed on [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|First Amendment]] grounds, but the case proceeded to trial on the remaining three counts.<ref>{{Cite web|title=SNYDER v. PHELPS - 533 F.Supp.2d 567 (2008) - p2d56711043 - Leagle.com|url=https://www.leagle.com/decision/20081100533fsupp2d56711043|access-date=2021-06-27|website=Leagle|language=en}}</ref>
===The death of Debbie Valgos===
It remains in great dispute how much involvement Phelps had in the death of 17 year old Topeka girl [[Debbie Valgos]], whom some of his family members claim was married to his son Fred Jr. in a secret ceremony. While Valgos' cause of death is listed as "accidental," the circumstances surrounding her demise leave it questionable as to whether she died accidentally, committed suicide, or whether she was murdered by someone conspiring with Fred Phelps.


Albert Snyder, the father of LCpl Matthew A. Snyder, testified:
Having met in 1970 during one of WBC's candy drives, Fred Jr. and Valgos became sweethearts, which angered Phelps, who has [[arranged marriage]]s for five of his thirteen children. Valgos, in addition to being [[Catholic]], was a decidedly [[hippie]] girl who introduced Fred Jr. to outside influences such as contemporary rock music and [[Roller skating#Quad Skating|roller skating]]. While the elder Phelps had long informed Fred Jr. that the boy would go to law school, with Valgos' urging, Fred Jr. began to think of pursuing his dream of becoming a history professor. One day the elder Phelps informed his congregation that he was considering allowing Fred Jr. and Valgos to pursue their relationship, under the condition that Valgos attend church services at Westboro. When Valgos arrived for her first sermon, the church bulletin board read "Debbie Valgos: The Whore of Topeka," with Phelps' sermon being nothing more than an hour long attack on Debbie Valgos, accusing her of a variety of perverse sexual acts. This continued on for several weeks, with Phelps apologizing each week to Valgos, only for her to return the next week and suffer increasingly vulgar attacks. These culminated in Phelps assaulting Valgos at a crowded roller rink, resulting in Valgos suffering an epileptic fit. {{ref|addict7}}


{{blockquote|They turned this funeral into a media circus and they wanted to hurt my family. They wanted their message heard and they didn't care who they stepped over. My son should have been buried with dignity, not with a bunch of clowns outside.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.newsline.umd.edu/justice/westboro-supreme-court-030211.htm|title=Supreme Court Upholds Anti-Gay Church's Protest Rights in Md. Case|last=Marso|first=Andy|date=March 2, 2011|work=Maryland Newsline|access-date=December 22, 2012}}</ref>}}
Eventually Fred Jr. and Valgos ran away together. Their whereabouts were unaccounted for a brief period of days; according to some of Fred Jr.'s siblings, during this time he and Valgos were married in a private ceremony, the details of which have never been explicitly discussed. Sometime later, Fred Phelps ascertained where Fred Jr. was staying and, along with another Westboro congregant, kidnapped him at gunpoint and forced him back to the church, where he was allegedly held hostage for a brief period before running away again and living in a friend's basement. It is unknown whether he and Valgos ever saw one another again. {{ref|addict7}}


In his instructions to the jury, U.S. District Judge [[Richard D. Bennett]] stated that the First Amendment protection of free speech has limits, including vulgar, offensive and shocking statements, and that the jury must decide "whether the defendant's actions would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, whether they were extreme and outrageous and whether these actions were so offensive and shocking as to not be entitled to First Amendment protection". (see also ''[[Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire]]'', a case in which certain personal slurs and obscene utterances by an individual were found unworthy of First Amendment protection, due to the potential for violence resulting from their utterance). WBC sought a [[mistrial (law)|mistrial]] based on alleged prejudicial statements made by the judge and violations of the [[gag order]] by the plaintiff's attorney. An appeal was also sought by the WBC. On February 4, 2008, Bennett upheld the ruling but reduced the punitive damages from $8 million to $2.1 million. The total judgment then stood at $5 million. Court [[lien]]s were ordered on church buildings and Phelps' law office in an attempt to ensure that the damages were paid.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://seattletimes.com/html/nationworld/2004164853_apfuneralprotests05.html|title=Damages Reduced in Funeral Protest Case|date=February 5, 2008|work=The Seattle Times|agency=The Associated Press|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref>
Valgos turned up some months later as a drug addict "party girl" who hung around military bases, still mourning the loss of Fred. The circumstances of her April 17th, 1972 death remain vague; in the weeks leading up to it, she had attempted suicide four times but been stopped by friends or army officers who discovered her. Allegedly, the night of her death, she took tainted drugs, then sustained internal injuries when an overweight friend of hers attempted to cease Valgos' convulsions by sitting on top of her. Some allege that Fred Phelps arranged for Valgos to be given tainted drugs or otherwise conspired for Valgos to be killed in a way that would appear accidental. The morning following her death, Fred Phelps broke the news to the rest of his family by dancing through the house singing "the whore is dead" to the tune of "Ding Dong the Witch is Dead" from ''[[The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)|The Wizard of Oz]].'' According to his siblings, Fred Jr. continued to carry around Valgos' photo in his wallet for over a year following her death. During the period he was being held at Westboro, he was introduced to Betty Schurle, whom he would eventually marry. Although his sister Margie Phelps told the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' in 1994 "Debbie Valgos was a whore extraordinaire," Fred Jr. himself claims not to remember any of the incidents surrounding his time with her. {{ref|addict7}}


An appeal by WBC was heard on September 24, 2009. The [[federal appeals court]] ruled in favor of Phelps and Westboro Baptist Church, stating that their picket near the funeral of LCpl Matthew A. Snyder is protected speech and did not violate the privacy of the service member's family, reversing the lower court's $5 million judgment. On March 30, 2010, the federal appeals court ordered Albert Snyder to pay the [[court costs]] for the Westboro Baptist Church, an amount totaling $16,510.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/29/father-of-dead-marine-ord_n_517614.html|title=Father of Dead Marine Ordered To Pay Legal Fees of Westboro Baptist Church Protesters|date=May 29, 2010|work=[[The Huffington Post]]|agency=The Associated Press|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref> [[Pundit (expert)|Political commentator]] [[Bill O'Reilly (political commentator)|Bill O'Reilly]] agreed on March 30 to cover the costs, pending appeal.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2010/04/marine_scotus_040510w|title=Snyder-Phelps Fight has Many Twists, Turns|last=Lamothe|first=Dan|date=April 5, 2010|work=Marine Corps Times|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130324031812/http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2010/04/marine_scotus_040510w|archive-date=March 24, 2013}}</ref>
Two of Phelps' sons told the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' in 1993 that they would not be surprised if it turned out that Phelps conspired to kill Valgos, and that they believed it was a definite possibility. Valgos' mother, who disappeared in 1994, told the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' in 1993 that she believed Fred Phelps played an active role in her daughter's death. When she attempted to confront Phelps about the matter in the days following Valgos' death, Phelps threatened her with physical violence and informed her "your whore daughter's burnin' in Hell now." The nuns who were responsible for Valgos, though silent on the matter of whether Valgos' death was accidental, suicide, or murder, indicated that they hold Fred Phelps responsible for her death.{{ref|addict7}}


A [[writ of certiorari]] was granted on an appeal to the [[Supreme Court of the United States]], and the oral argument for the case took place on October 6, 2010. Margie Phelps, one of Fred Phelps' children, represented the Westboro Baptist Church.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna39531700|title=Court Hears 'Thank God for Dead Soldiers' Case|date=October 6, 2010|work=[[MSN]]|agency=The Associated Press|access-date=December 11, 2012|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120919215544/http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/39531700/ns/politics/|archive-date=September 19, 2012}}</ref>
Valgos is interred at Mount Calvary Cemetery in [[Pottawatomie County]], Kansas.


The Court ruled in favor of Phelps in an 8–1 decision, holding that the protesters' speech related to a public issue, and was disseminated on a public sidewalk. Chief Justice [[John Roberts]] wrote, for the majority, "As a nation we have chosen ... to protect even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate." Justice [[Samuel Alito]], the lone dissenter, wrote, "Our profound national commitment to free and open debate is not a license for the vicious verbal assault that occurred in this case."<ref name="snyder_v_phelps_us_supreme_court_ruling">{{citation|url=https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/10pdf/09-751.pdf|title=Snyder v. Phelps et al.|last=Supreme Court of the United States|date=March 2, 2011|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref>
[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Valgos&GSfn=Debbie&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSob=n&GRid=10290387&pt=Debbie%20L%20Valgos& Debbie Valgos' burial records at Find a Grave.com]


===Efforts to discourage funeral protests===
===Phelps' law career===
On May 24, 2006, the United States House and Senate passed the [[Respect for America's Fallen Heroes Act]], which President [[George W. Bush]] signed five days later. The act bans protests within {{convert|300|ft|m}} of [[national cemetery|national cemeteries]]&nbsp;– which numbered 122 when the bill was signed&nbsp;– from an hour before a funeral to an hour after it. Violators face up to a $100,000 fine and up to a year in prison.<ref name="abrams2006">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/25/AR2006052500431.html|title=Congress Bars Military Funeral Protesters|last=Abrams|first=Jim|date=May 25, 2006|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />
In order to become an [[attorney]] in Kansas, the applicant must have a signed [[affidavit]] from a judge attesting to the applicant's good character. Because of the reputation Phelps had garnered during his time at Washburn, not to mention his actions at Eastside and later Westboro, no judge was willing to sign the affidavit. Phelps finally managed to bypass this by submitting affidavits from his friends the Hockenbargers, and copies of letters of good conduct from his days as an Eagle Scout. Phelps still claims that there was a conspiracy against him to prevent him from becoming a lawyer. In a 1983 interview with the [[Wichita Eagle|Wichita Eagle-Beacon]], Fred claimed he was a victim of "the leading lights of the Jim Crow Topeka community...the presidents of the First National Bank, Merchants National Bank, Capitol Federal Savings and Loan, and the Kansas Power and Light Company."


On August 6, 2012, [[Barack Obama|President Obama]] signed {{USPL|112|154}}, the Honoring America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 which, among other things, requires a {{convert|300|ft|m|adj=on}} and 2-hour buffer zone around military funerals.<ref name="HP 20120806"/>
Phelps began work as an attorney defending the civil rights of [[African Americans]] being discriminated against in Kansas. Mark, Nate, and Dorothy Phelps maintain that their father possesses a bizarre dislike of blacks, believing that they deserve to be defended in court, but that they are also "the servant of the servant," which is to say, the servant of the white race, and more specifically, Westboro Baptist Church, "God's chosen people." Mark further recalls his father playing a game with his black clients, the object of which was to slip in the letters "D.N." while he was talking to his clients, disguised as legal terminology. The letters stood for "Dumb Nigger."


{{As of|2006|04}}, nine states had passed laws regarding protests near funeral sites immediately before and after ceremonies:
Around this same time, Phelps was sued by the Money Tree Candy Co., in [[Minneapolis, Minnesota]], for the candy he had paid for with bad [[cheque|check]]s. Despite fighting the case in court — Phelps instructed his children to [[perjury|perjure]] themselves — Phelps lost the case and was ordered to pay $20,000 to the company. Phelps still owed this money as of 1995, at which time the corporation was still attempting to find Phelps' bank account to put a [[lien]] against it. {{ref|addict5}}
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}
* [[Illinois]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Gov. Blagojevich Signs "Let Them Rest in Peace Act" Allowing Families to Peacefully Grieve Fallen Soldiers|date=May 17, 2006|url= http://www3.illinois.gov/PressReleases/ShowPressRelease.cfm?SubjectID=1&RecNum=4891|access-date=December 11, 2012}}</ref>
* [[Indiana]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/ind-enacts-funeral-protest-law|title=Ind. Enacts Funeral-Protest Law|agency=The Associated Press|date=March 3, 2006|work=First Amendment Center|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140330214816/http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/ind-enacts-funeral-protest-law|archive-date=March 30, 2014}}</ref>
* [[Iowa]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://archive.firstamendmentcenter.org/news.aspx?id=16779|title=Iowa Governor Signs Bill Restricting Funeral Protests|agency=The Associated Press|date=April 18, 2006|work=First Amendment Center|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130414173231/http://archive.firstamendmentcenter.org/news.aspx?id=16779|archive-date=April 14, 2013}}</ref>
* [[Kansas]]<!--<ref>http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/local/14090898.htm {{Bare URL inline|date=July 2024}}{{Dead link|date=May 2010}}</ref>-->
* [[Kentucky]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://archive.firstamendmentcenter.org/news.aspx?id=16699|title=Ky. Enacts Limits for Funeral Protests|agency=The Associated press|date=March 28, 2006|work=First Amendment Center|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130414180235/http://archive.firstamendmentcenter.org/news.aspx?id=16699|archive-date=April 14, 2013}}</ref>
* [[Louisiana]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.wwltv.com/local/stories/wwl041806jbfunerals.4b3d754c.html|title= Senate Committee Approves Bill to Limit Funeral Protests|last=Deslatte|first=Melinda|date=April 18, 2006|work=WWLTV|agency=The Associated Press|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090107212142/http://www.wwltv.com/local/stories/wwl041806jbfunerals.4b3d754c.html|archive-date=January 7, 2009}}</ref>
* [[Maryland]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://wjz.com/topstories/local_story_082070525.html|title=Funeral Protest Ban Clears Maryland House|agency=The Associated Press|date=March 23, 2006|work=WJZ|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071223004335/http://wjz.com/topstories/funeral.protest.Annapolis.2.421340.html|archive-date=December 23, 2007}}</ref>
* [[Michigan]]<!--<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wlns.com/Global/story.asp?s=8945|archive-url=https://archive.today/20071012030705/http://www.wlns.com/Global/story.asp?s=8945|title=WLNS TV 6 Lansing Jackson Michigan News and Weather - WLNS.COM - Our ...|date=October 12, 2007|archive-date=October 12, 2007}}</ref>-->
* [[Missouri]]<!--<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thekansascitychannel.com/news/7597398/detail.html |title=Blunt Signs Funeral Protest Bill – Kansas City News Story – KMBC Kansas City |publisher=Thekansascitychannel.com |date=March 1, 2006 |access-date=July 9, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013223252/http://www.thekansascitychannel.com/news/7597398/detail.html |archive-date=October 13, 2007 }}</ref>-->
{{div col end}}


States that are considering laws are:
Phelps' law career saw an abundance of [[fraud]] and [[extortion]]. He sold expensive baby carriages on a layaway plan to poor, young couples, and then immediately filed lawsuits against them when they were so much as a day late. {{ref|addict6}} In another scam, Phelps would go to friends of his customers asking them to sign a paper attesting to their friends' good credit. The paper contained a vague clause that, when translated, obliged the signing party to buy a baby carriage from Phelps; those who Phelps targeted were often blacks who were either illiterate or had poor education. When the person inevitably refused to buy the carriage, Phelps would sue them for breach of contract.{{ref|addict6}}
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}
* [[Nebraska]]
* [[Ohio]]
* [[Oklahoma]]<!--<ref>[http://okinsider.com/topic_01OF0MMAHW/readstory.oki?storyid=0QX0W1CXY OkInsider.com – Selected News Story] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928161635/http://okinsider.com/topic_01OF0MMAHW/readstory.oki?storyid=0QX0W1CXY |date=September 28, 2007 }}</ref>-->
* [[South Carolina]]<ref>{{cite web|title=2005–2006 Bill 4965: Funeral Services|author=South Carolina General Assembly|date=May 21, 2006|url=http://www.scstatehouse.gov/sess116_2005-2006/bills/4965.htm|access-date=December 22, 2012}}</ref>
* [[South Dakota]]
* [[Texas]]
* [[Vermont]]
* [[Virginia]]
* [[West Virginia]]
* [[Wisconsin]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.wwrn.org/article.php?idd=20530&sec=36&con=4|title=Wisconsin Enacts Ban on Protests at Funerals|agency=The Associated Press|date=February 21, 2006|work=Worldwide Religious News|access-date=December 12, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080221141304/http://www.wwrn.org/article.php?idd=20530&sec=36&con=4|archive-date=February 21, 2008}}</ref>
{{div col end}}


Florida increased the penalty for disturbing military funerals, amending a previous ban on the disruption of lawful assembly.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.myfloridahouse.gov/Sections/Bills/billsdetail.aspx?BillId=33923|title=HB 7127 – Disturbance of Assemblies|date=June 20, 2006|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref>
Between 1958 and 1964, Phelps filed fourteen lawsuits, targeting among other people his former co-pastor at Eastside, Leaford Cavin, and the radio station KTOP; Phelps had paid to deliver sermons on the station every Sunday morning, but the station cancelled the deal when Phelps began to use the time to launch into obscenity-laden tirades.


On January 11, 2011, Arizona passed an emergency measure which prohibits protests within {{convert|300|ft|m}} of any funeral services, in response to an announcement by the WBC that it planned to protest at [[2011 Tucson shooting]] victim Christina Green's funeral.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-funeral-protest-20110112,0,7494257.story|title=Tucson Rallies to Protect Girl's Family from Protesters|last1=Mehta|first1=Seema|last2=Santa|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=December 12, 2012|first2=Nicole|date=January 11, 2011}}</ref>
In October of 1966, Phelps, now a public defender, was appointed to represent a black man arrested for [[forgery]]. Phelps obtained $200 from the man's wife to use as bail. Days later, the woman hired Phelps to help her [[divorce]] the man. He charged her $50, then drew up legal documents to show she had paid him $250 for the divorce, keeping the bail money for himself. The man remained in jail until his trial. {{ref|addict6}}


These bans have been contested. Bart McQueary, having protested with Phelps on at least three occasions,<ref name="american2007">{{cite web|url=http://aclu-ky.org/content/view/352/149/|title=McQueary v. Stumbo|last=American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky|date=June 7, 2007|work=Freedom of Speech & Assembly|access-date=December 12, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100425022636/http://aclu-ky.org/content/view/352/149/|archive-date=April 25, 2010}}</ref> filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the constitutionality of Kentucky's funeral protest ban. On September 26, 2006, a district court agreed and entered an injunction prohibiting the ban from being enforced.<ref name="american2007"/> In the opinion, the judge wrote:
In March 1965, Phelps was hired to handle a divorce case. The woman paid an up-front fee of $1,000. She fired him a month later, but Phelps still demanded $1,500 in unpaid bills. He took the woman to court, where the court ruled that Phelps had no right to the money. Phelps responded by suing the woman in civil court; the Kansas Supreme Court stepped in, accusing Phelps of harassment. They issued a statement declaring that Phelps "demonstrates a lack of professional self-restraint in matters of compensation." {{ref|addict6}}


{{blockquote|Sections 5(1)(b) and (c) restrict substantially more speech than that which would interfere with a funeral or that which would be so obtrusive that funeral participants could not avoid it. Accordingly, the provisions are not narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest but are instead unconstitutionally overbroad.<ref>{{Citation|title=McQueary v. Stumbo|date=September 26, 2006|url=https://scholar.google.com.au/scholar_case?case=17977822682763826148&hl=en&as_sdt=6&as_vis=1&oi=scholarr|volume=453|page=975|access-date=2021-06-27}}</ref>}}
Assistant [[Attorney General]] Richard Seaton stated that Phelps displayed:


The [[American Civil Liberties Union]] filed a lawsuit in [[Missouri]] on behalf of Phelps and Westboro Baptist Church to overturn the ban on the picketing of soldier's funerals.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/22/AR2006072200643.html|title=ACLU Sues for Anti-Gay Group That Pickets at Troops' Burials|last=Burke|first=Garance|agency=The Associated Press|date=July 23, 2006|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref> The ACLU of Ohio also filed a similar lawsuit.{{citation needed|date=May 2018}}
: an uncontrollable appetite for money—especially the money of his client... [Phelps' conduct] is one of total disregard for the duties and the respect and consideration owed by an attorney to his clients. Where money is concerned, the accused simply lacks any sense of balance and proportion. Whatever the reason for this, it appears to me a permanent condition. {{ref|addict6}}


In the case of ''[[Snyder v. Phelps]]'', the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that "distasteful and repugnant" protests surrounding funerals of service members were protected by the First Amendment. But attorneys for the service member's family appealed the decision on the grounds that such speech should not be allowed to inflict emotional distress on private parties exercising their freedom of religion during a funeral service. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case on October 6, 2010, and ruled 8–1 in favor of Phelps in an opinion released on March 2, 2011.<ref name="snyder_v_phelps_us_supreme_court_ruling" /><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" /> The court held that "any distress occasioned by Westboro's picketing turned on the content and viewpoint of the message conveyed, rather than any interference with the funeral itself" and thus could not be restricted.<ref name="snyder_v_phelps_us_supreme_court_ruling" /><ref name="upholds_2011_03_02_metro_weekly">{{cite web|url=http://www.metroweekly.com/poliglot/2011/03/supreme-court-upholds-westboro.html|title=Supreme Court Upholds Westboro Baptist Church Members' Right to Picket Funerals|last=Geidner|first=Chris|date=March 2, 2011|work=Metro Weekly|access-date=December 12, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130208053429/http://www.metroweekly.com/poliglot/2011/03/supreme-court-upholds-westboro.html|archive-date=February 8, 2013}}</ref><ref name="right_upheld_2011_03_02_cnn">{{Cite news | last = Mears | first = Bill | title = Anti-gay church's right to protest at military funerals is upheld | work = CNN.com | date = March 2, 2011 | url = http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/03/02/scotus.westboro.church/index.html?iref=allsearch | access-date = May 28, 2013}}</ref><ref name="why_2011_03_03_time_com">{{Cite news | last = Gregory | first = Sean | title = Why the Supreme Court Ruled for Westboro | newspaper = Time Magazine | date = March 3, 2011 | url = http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2056613,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110304231118/http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2056613,00.html | archive-date = March 4, 2011 | access-date = August 28, 2013}}</ref>
As a result, Phelps was suspended for two years. (''See In re Phelps'', 204 Kan. 16, 459 P.2d 172 (Kan. 1969) (Kansas Supreme Court opinion))


===People targeted by Phelps===
A former co-worker at Phelps' law firm recalls Phelps' attitude towards the people he sued:
[[File:Fred Phelps at Capitol.jpg|thumb|Phelps picketing outside the [[Kansas State Capitol]]]]
Beginning in the early 1990s, Phelps targeted numerous individuals and groups in the public eye for criticism by the Westboro Baptist Church.


Prominent examples include President [[Ronald Reagan]], [[Diana, Princess of Wales|Princess Diana]], Supreme Court Chief Justice [[William Rehnquist]], National Football League star [[Reggie White]], [[Sonny Bono]], comedian [[George Carlin]], [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]], [[atheists]], Muslims, murdered college student [[Matthew Shepard]], children's television host [[Mister Rogers|Fred Rogers]], American televangelist [[Tammy Faye Bakker]],<ref>{{cite news|title=Tammy Faye memorial targeted by bigot Rev. Phelps|url=https://ohnotheydidnt.livejournal.com/16184694.html|access-date=January 9, 2024}}</ref> Australian actor [[Heath Ledger]], [[Comedy Central]]'s [[Jon Stewart]] and [[Stephen Colbert]], political commentator [[Bill O'Reilly (political commentator)|Bill O'Reilly]], filmmaker [[Richard Rossi]], film critic [[Roger Ebert]],<ref>{{cite news|last=Child|first=Ben|title=Roger Ebert's funeral targeted by Westboro Baptist church|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/apr/08/roger-ebert-funeral-westboro-baptist-church|access-date=March 17, 2014|newspaper=The Guardian|date=April 8, 2013}}</ref> Catholics, Australians,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatestheworld.com/australia/index.html|title=God Hates Australia|access-date=December 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130116194805/http://www.godhatestheworld.com/australia/index.html|archive-date=January 16, 2013}}</ref> Swedes, the Irish, and US soldiers killed in [[Iraq]]. He also targeted the [[Joseph Estabrook Elementary School]] in [[Lexington, Massachusetts]], center of the David Parker controversy.
: I was waiting in the [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]] airport with him. We were working a civil rights case. He told me [he] had to file twenty lawsuits to get one judgement. I said to him, "But what about the other nineteen people you sue? It costs them a lot of money and heartache to defend themselves." He just laughed at me. {{ref|co}}


Phelps also picketed memorials to victims of different mass shootings, including the [[Misinformation|spreading of unfounded theories]], such as saying that [[Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold]], the perpetrators of the 1999 [[Columbine High School massacre]], were gay, saying that "Two filthy fags slaughtered 13 people at Columbine High."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Cullen |first1=Dave |author1-link=Dave Cullen|title=Gay leaders fear Littleton backlash |url=https://www.salon.com/1999/04/27/gay/ |access-date=20 January 2022 |work=[[Salon.com]] |date=27 April 1999}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Watson |first1=J. |title=The Martyrs of Columbine: Faith and the Politics of Tragedy |date=2003 |publisher=[[Springer Publishing]] |location=[[New York City]] |isbn=978-1-4039-7000-8 |page=90}}</ref>
In October of 1973, two of Fred's children placed a television set on layaway at [[Sears#Stores|Sears]], to be ready at Christmas. When the children came back in November and asked for the television set, Sears told them that it would not be ready until Christmas, per the layaway contract. Fred Phelps responded by filing a $50,000,000 lawsuit against Sears, in addition to another class-action lawsuit, claiming it to be on behalf of 1,000,000 unidentified Sears customers. The class action portion of the suit was thrown out of court; the case lasted six years in court, ending in 1979 with Phelps being granted $126.34, less than the cost of the television set.


In 2006, in the aftermath of the [[West Nickel Mines School shooting]], where five [[Amish]] girls were murdered, Phelps mocked the shooting, saying that it had been caused by Pennsylvania Governor [[Ed Rendell]]'s criticism of Westboro.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jerryson |first1=Michael |title=Religious Violence Today: Faith and Conflict in the Modern World [2 volumes] |date=2020 |publisher=[[ABC-Clio]] |location=[[Santa Barbara, California]] |isbn=978-1-4408-5991-5 |page=237}}</ref> Phelps further planned a protest at the funeral for the five girls murdered, but called it off, opting to spread their messages on a local radio station instead.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.foxnews.com/story/anti-gay-kansas-church-cancels-protests-at-funerals-for-slain-amish-girls|title=Anti-Gay Kansas Church Cancels Protests at Funerals for Slain Amish Girls|last=Bonisteel|first=Sara|date=October 4, 2006|work=[[Fox News Channel]]|access-date=December 11, 2012|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130122053846/http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,217760,00.html|archive-date=January 22, 2013}}</ref>
By this time, Phelps had more complaints filed against him for misconduct than any attorney in the history of the state of Kansas (and, some believe, the history of the United States).{{ref|addict6}}


Phelps continued picketing funerals and memorials for victims of mass shootings during the late 2000s, including the plan to picket the memorial for two victims of the [[Northern Illinois University shooting]] in 2008, which was countered by a preacher who hosted a seminar against Phelps' views.<ref>{{cite news |title=Anti-gay group to protest NIU funerals |url=https://www.upi.com/Top_News/2008/02/18/Anti-gay-group-to-protest-NIU-funerals/23831203356044/ |work=[[United Press International]] |date=18 February 2008}}</ref> After Phelps announced plans, as aforementioned, to picket the funeral of the youngest victim of the [[2011 Tucson shooting]] on Congresswoman [[Gabby Giffords]], Phelps responded to the emergency legislation which banned him from doing so, by praising the shooter, [[Jared Lee Loughner]], saying: "Thank God for the violent shooter", and labeled Loughner as a "hero".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jan/11/christina-taylor-green-funeral-westboro-baptist-church|title=Religious extremists banned from picketing Arizona shooting funeral
===The Carolene Brady incident, and Phelps' disbarment===
|last=McGreal|first=Chris|date=January 11, 2011|work=[[The Guardian]]}}</ref> In 2007, he stated that he would target [[Jerry Falwell]]'s funeral.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.foxnews.com/story/anti-gay-kansas-church-members-plan-to-picket-falwell-funeral/|title=Anti-Gay Kansas Church Members Plan to Picket Falwell Funeral|last=Bonisteel|first=Sara|date=May 17, 2007|work=[[Fox News Channel]]|access-date=March 12, 2015|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150213205835/http://www.foxnews.com/story/2007/05/17/anti-gay-kansas-church-members-plan-to-picket-falwell-funeral/|archive-date=February 13, 2015}}</ref>
In 1976, an investigation launched by the Kansas Supreme Court in association with the Kansas Bar Association determined that Phelps had been extorting his clients by demanding more money than he was entitled to and threatening to sue the person, then taking a series of $1,500 "walk-away fees." He had done the same to other people he was threatening to sue, telling them that if they paid him $1,500 up front he wouldn't file against them. {{ref|addict6}}


Phelps' daughter, Shirley Phelps-Roper, has appeared on [[Fox News Channel]], defending the WBC and attacking homosexuality. She and her children have also appeared on the [[Howard Stern]] radio show attempting to promote their agenda and church. Phelps' followers have repeatedly protested the [[University of Kansas School of Law]]'s graduation ceremonies.
A formal complaint was filed against Fred W. Phelps, Sr. on November 8, 1977 by the Kansas State Board of Law Examiners for his conduct during a lawsuit against a court reporter named Carolene Brady. Brady had failed to have a court transcript ready for Phelps on the day he asked for it; though it did not affect the outcome of the case for which Phelps had requested the transcript, Phelps still requested $22,000 in damages from her. In the ensuing trial, Phelps called Brady to the stand, declared her a hostile witness, and then cross-examined her for nearly a week, during which he accused her of being a "[[slut]]," tried to introduce testimony from former boyfriends whom Phelps wanted to [[subpoena]], and accused her of a variety of perverse sexual acts, ultimately reducing her to tears on the stand. Phelps lost the case; according to the Kansas Supreme Court:


In August 2007, in the wake of the [[Minneapolis]] [[I-35W bridge collapse]], Phelps and his congregation stated that they would protest at the funerals of the victims. In a statement, the church said that Minneapolis is the "land of the Sodomite damned".<ref>Black, Eric [http://www.minnesotamonitor.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=2184 "Fred Phelps is Coming"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927033032/http://www.minnesotamonitor.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=2184|date=September 27, 2007}}, ''Minnesota Monitor'', August 7, 2007.</ref>
: The trial became an exhibition of a personal vendetta by Phelps against Carolene Brady. His examination was replete with repetition, badgering, innuendo, belligerence, irrelevant and immaterial matter, evidencing only a desire to hurt and destroy the defendant. The jury verdict didn't stop the onslaught of Phelps. He was not satisfied with the hurt, pain, and damage he had visited on Carolene Brady. {{ref|addict6}}


==Political activities==
In an appeal, Phelps prepared affidavits swearing to the court that he had eight witnesses whose testimony would convince the court to rule in his favor. Brady, in turn, obtained sworn, signed affidavits from the eight people in question, all of whom said that Phelps had never contacted them and that they had no reason to testify against Brady; Phelps had committed perjury. {{ref|addict6}}
===Anti-gay===
In the movie ''Hatemongers'', members of the Westboro Baptist Church state their children were being "accosted" by homosexuals in [[Gage Park, Topeka|Gage Park]], about a {{frac|2}}{{nbs}}mile {{nowrap|({{convert|1/2|mi|m|sigfig=1|disp=out}})}} from the Phelps' home and a mile {{nowrap|({{convert|1|mi|disp=out}})}} northwest of Westboro Baptist Church. [[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] says that, in the late 1980s, Fred Phelps claimed to have witnessed a homosexual attempting to lure her then five-year-old son Joshua into some shrubbery. After several complaints to the local government about the large amount of homosexual sex occurring in the park, with no resulting action, the Phelpses put up signs warning of homosexual activity. This resulted in much negative attention for the family. When the Phelpses called on local churches to speak against the activity in Gage Park, the churches also lashed out against the Phelps family, leading to the family protesting homosexuality on a regular basis.<ref name="ocweekly1999"/><ref name="phelps_dies_2014_03_20_wichita_eagle" />


In 2005, Phelps and his family, along with several other local congregations, held a signature drive to bring about a vote to repeal two city ordinances that added sexual orientation to a definition of [[hate crime]]s and banned the city itself from workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation. Enough signatures were collected to bring the measure to a vote.<ref>{{citation|url=http://cjonline.com/stories/022705/mid_primaryquestion.shtml|title=Issue Becomes a Line in the Sand for Some|last=Hrenchir|first=Tim|work=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|date=February 27, 2005|access-date=December 10, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140408131929/http://cjonline.com/stories/022705/mid_primaryquestion.shtml|archive-date=April 8, 2014}}</ref> Topeka voters defeated the repeal measure on March 1, 2005, by a 53–47% margin. In the same election, Phelps' granddaughter Jael was an unsuccessful candidate for the Topeka City Council, seeking to replace Tiffany Muller, the first openly gay member of the council.<ref>{{citation|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna7053489|title=Topeka Voters Reject Repeal of Anti-Bias Law|date=March 2, 2005|work=[[MSN]]|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref>
On [[July 20]] [[1979]], Fred Phelps was permanently disbarred from practicing law in the state of Kansas. (''See State v. Phelps'', 226 Kan. 371, 598 P.2d 180 (Kan. 1979) (Kansas Supreme Court opinion))


===Electoral politics===
Years later, when the attorney who chaired the hearings died, Phelps sneaked into the [[Wake (ceremony)|wake]] and signed the guestbook, "Vengeance is mine." Because of the state [[disbarment]], Phelps was automatically suspended from practicing law until 1982. In the spring of 1983, Phelps began issuing letters of demand for $1,500 to people he was planning on suing, causing federal extortion charges to be brought against him. He immediately filed 200 lawsuits, including one against [[Ronald Reagan]] for $1,000,000 for sending a US ambassador to the Vatican. He also sued a Topeka school teacher for $1,000,000 for criticizing [[Calvinism]], and the ''[[Wichita Eagle|Wichita Eagle-Beacon]]'' for running a story about him. {{ref|addict6}} By this time, Phelps had forced several of his children to go through law school -- getting them accepted through the help of Washburn employee and Westboro member Karl Hockenbarger -- and formed a law firm with them, Phelps Chartered. When charges were brought up against Phelps, his children were also named. In response, Phelps began an attack on the federal judges who were to preside over his hearing, demanding they resign, and claiming that he had affidavits from independent witnesses who claimed to have overheard one of the judges say: "Those Phelpses, they're everywhere showing off. It will be harder now, but I will destroy them." {{ref|addict6}} The "independent witnesses" turned out to be Brent Roper, Phelps' son-in-law.
[[File:DNC4 7-27-2004.jpg|thumb|Phelps speaking at a picket at the [[2004 Democratic National Convention]]]]
Phelps ran in Kansas [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] primaries five times, but never won. These included races for governor in 1990, 1994, and 1998, receiving about 15 percent of the vote in 1998.<ref>{{citation|url=http://edition.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1998/08/05/kansas.results/|title=Kansas Primary Results|work=[[CNN]]|publisher=August 4, 1998|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref> In the 1992 Democratic Party primary for U.S. Senate, Phelps received 31 percent of the vote.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.kssos.org/elections/elections_statistics.html|title=Election Statistics|publisher=State of Kansas|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref> Phelps ran for mayor of Topeka in 1993<ref name="musser1">{{citation|url=http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/musser.shtml|title=In-Depth: Fred Phelps|last=Musser|first=Rick|work=[[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]|access-date=December 10, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121230064559/http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/musser.shtml|archive-date=December 30, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{citation|url=http://www.religionnewsblog.com/1128/kansas-anti-gay-church-embarrasses-topekans|title=Kansas Anti-gay Church Embarrasses Topekans|last=Evans|first=Melissa|date=November 4, 2002|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref> and 1997.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}


Phelps supported [[Al Gore]] in the [[Democratic Party presidential primaries, 1988|1988 Democratic Party presidential primary]] election. In his [[United States Senate election in Tennessee, 1984|1984 Senate race]], Gore had opposed a "gay bill of rights" and stated that homosexuality was not something that "society should affirm", a position Gore had publicly changed by 2000 as his official position. Phelps stated that he supported Gore because of these earlier comments.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Andrea Drusch|access-date=2020-09-18|title=Fred Phelps: 10 things to know|url=https://www.politico.com/story/2014/03/fred-phelps-westboro-baptist-church-104745.html|website=POLITICO|date=March 17, 2014 }}</ref>
Phelps was finally disbarred from practicing in federal court in 1989 as well, for his conduct in the Brady case, his [[perjury]], and for a series of unrelated ethical violations; in an unprecedented move, the motion for disbarment was signed by ''every'' federal judge in the state of [[Kansas]]. His final disbarment resulted from a plea deal through which the Federal Court would stop disbarment hearings against the rest of his family.


In 1996 Phelps opposed Clinton's (and Gore's) re-election because of the administration's support for [[gay rights]]; the Westboro congregation picketed a 1997 inaugural ball.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.qrd.org/qrd/media/radio/thiswayout/summary/newswrap/1997/461-01.27.97|title=NewsWrap|last=Friedman|first=Cindy|date=January 27, 1997|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref>
Phelps alleges that his success resulted in animosity among the white legal establishment and his eventual [[disbarment]] by the Kansas Supreme Court for ethical violations. ([http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/feb2004/Monograph_2-14-2004.pdf PDF file of Phelps's point of view on his disbarment])


===Saddam Hussein===
Two years after his disbarment, Phelps would begin his anti-gay picketing crusades.
In 1997, Phelps wrote a letter to Iraqi President [[Saddam Hussein]], praising his regime for being "the only Muslim state that allows the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ to be freely and openly preached on the streets".<ref name="ITOW">{{cite web|url=http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/wbc_on_america.asp|title=In Their Own Words: On America|publisher=Anti-Defamation League|year=2006|access-date=December 10, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121005150347/http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/wbc_on_america.asp|archive-date=October 5, 2012}}</ref>


==Activities and statements==
==Arrests and traveling restrictions==
[[Image:Phelps child picket.jpg|thumb|One of Phelps' grandchildren at a picket rally.]]
For a summation of Phelps' stated goals and theology, as well as information on his pickets, please see the [[Westboro Baptist Church#The Group Westboro's goals, theology, and picketing|Westboro Baptist Church]] entry, as they are the stated goals and theology of the entire congregation and not exclusive to Phelps.


For a look at Phelps' more infamous actions and statements, refer to [[Westboro Baptist Church#Claiming divine retribution.2FNotable Activities|Westboro's notable activities]], as all of these actions and statements were done and made in collusion with the entirety of the congregation.

==Personal beliefs==
During 1993–94 interviews with the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'', four of Phelps' children asserted that their father's religious beliefs were either nonexistent to begin with or have dwindled down to nearly nothing. They claim that Westboro serves to enable a [[paraphilia]] of Phelps, wherein he is literally addicted to hatred (this statement would serve as the inspiration for the title of the book about Phelps' life). Two of his sons, Mark and Nate, claim that the church is actually a carefully planned cult that allows Phelps to see himself as a demigod, wielding absolute control over the lives of his family and congregants, essentially turning them into slaves that he can use for the sole purpose of gratifying his every whim and acting as the structure for his delusion that he is the only righteous man on Earth. {{ref|pre}} In 1995, Mark Phelps wrote a letter to the people of Topeka to this effect; it was run in the ''Topeka Capital-Journal''. {{ref|mark}}
The children's claim is partially backed up by B.H. McAllister, the Baptist minister who ordained Phelps. McAllister said in a 1993 interview that Phelps developed a delusion wherein he was one of the only people on Earth worthy of God's grace and that everyone else in the world was going to Hell, and that salvation or damnation could be directly obtained by either aligning with or opposing Phelps. Phelps maintains this belief to this day. {{ref|pre}}

==Authorship==
According to Phelps' children, he has written several unpublished biographies of medieval religious figures. Phelps is a collector of ancient religious texts and has a library of books about and by medieval- and reformation-era religious figures, which lends some support to these claims.

Phelps also wrote a book in the 1980s with his son-in-law, [[Brent D. Roper]], called ''The Conspiracy''. In the book, Roper and Phelps claim to possess evidence that [[AIDS]] was spontaneously generated in [[Africa]]; [[Truman Capote]] contracted the disease during an orgy with African tribesmen; Capote then gave the disease to [[John F. Kennedy]] and [[Marilyn Monroe]] by playing [[American football|football]] with them; and that the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] [[assassin]]ated all three to prevent the spread of the disease. Phelps published and distributed the book himself; it was also sold in the back of [[Peter J. Peters]] catalogue of [[extremist]] literature, and thus became a widely circulated text among such groups as the [[Ku Klux Klan]], [[Aryan Brotherhood]], and [[Christian Identity]].

==The Laramie Project==
[[Image:Fred2004.JPG|frame|Phelps giving an interview about ''The Laramie Project'' in 2000.]]
A large portion of Westboro's pickets are "retribution pickets" revolving around the play ''[[The Laramie Project]]''; Phelps constantly sends his followers across the country to picket every performance he finds out about. The play documents the reaction of the people of [[Laramie, Wyoming]] to the murder of [[Matthew Shepard]]. The reason for these protests is that Phelps is a character in the play and is portrayed negatively. Some of his ardent supporters claim that the play constitutes [[Slander and libel|libel]]. Phelps himself says about his portrayal in the play: "They did not interview me, and portrayed me in a false light that amounts to defamatory misrepresentation."

However, all of Phelps' dialogue in the play is taken verbatim from his own sermons.

When the play was made into a movie by [[HBO]], Phelps traveled to [[New York City]] to picket the HBO home offices with signs reading "United You'll Fall." Whenever Phelps sends picketers, he faxes a "review" to local newspapers for publishing; every review he sends is identical:

<!--
PLEASE READ BEFORE REMOVAL: This quote is direct from Fred Phelps and is explained in the paragraph above. Don't remove. You'll be quickly reverted.
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: The fag play "The Laramie Project" is a tacky bit of melodrama—unaffecting and drearily predictable—without artistic merit or redeeming social value.

==Political affiliations==

In the 1980s prior to Phelps protesting at funerals[http://www.alamanceind.com/algore/algore_11.html] the Phelps family were supporters of then-senator [[Al Gore]]'s Presidential aspirations. The basement of [[Fred Phelps Jr.]]'s law office, supposedley acted as Gore's Kansas campaign office, and the Phelps' hosted a fundraiser. Numerous photos exist on the internet of Fred Phelps Jr. and his second wife, Betty Phelps-Schurle, posing with Al and Tipper Gore. Phelps Jr. also served as a Gore delegate on the floor of the Democratic National Convention in [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]] in 1988. {{ref|ties}}

During Bill Clinton's presidential campaign, Fred Phelps Jr. and members of Westboro campaigned for Gore, though simultaneously attacking Hillary Clinton. In January 1993, Fred Phelps Jr. and Betty Phelps-Schurle were invited to the inaugural ball in [[Washington, D.C.]]{{ref|timeline}}

In the ensuing years leading up to Clinton's second presidential campaign, Gore and Clinton took stances increasingly in favor of [[gay rights]]. Consequently, Westboro turned against Gore, who nevertheless invited Fred Phelps, Marge, Fred Jr., and Betty back for the 1997 inauguration; they responded by bringing the entire Westboro congregation to the White House and picketing on the front lawn during the ball, {{ref|wrap}} with signs proclaiming that Gore, Clinton, and both men's families were going to Hell, not necessarily for their stances on homosexuality, but because they had "betrayed" Westboro. {{ref|flier}}

In 1998, Westboro picketed the funeral of Gore's father, screaming vulgarities at Gore and telling him "your dad's in Hell." {{ref|flier}}

Westboro signs with politican messages have read:
* AL GORE FAMILY VALUES (with a cartoon of two men having anal sex) {{ref|gorevalues}}
* GO HOME (with a cartoon of Bill Clinton)
* BABY KILLER (with a cartoon of Hillary Clinton)
* BABY KILLER (with a cartoon of Bill Clinton)
* FAG GORE

Phelps has failed in numerous Democratic primary elections for governor of the overwhelmingly Republican state of Kansas, in 1990, 1994, and the last time in 1998, when he came in second with a dismal 15,000 votes out of a total of over 103,000 votes cast, or 15%.{{ref|4}}

In the aftermath of the election, in an incident that would be repeated years later when Phelps circulated a fuzzy petition to outlaw homosexual work protection, Many of the Kansas Democrats who had cast votes for Phelps came forward to express their distaste for him. They claimed that Phelps had lied about his intentions to numerous constituents, using double-talk and fuzzy language to confuse them; neglected to mention his stances on race, religion, and homosexuality, and campaigned mainly on the platform of a "good ol' boy" [[Southern United States|Southern]] gentleman and retired lawyer unfairly prosecuted by the system. {{ref|365}}

More recently, Phelps was the subject of nationwide controversy when his family proposed, in a [[referendum]], the removal of workplace protection for homosexuals in Topeka. The measure was defeated, fifty three percent to forty seven percent. Also in 2005, Phelps' granddaughter Jael was an unsuccessful candidate for Topeka's City Council; Jael was seeking to replace [[Tiffany Muller]], the first openly gay member of the Topeka City Council.

Phelps has repeatedly championed [[Fidel Castro]] for Castro's stance against homosexuality; in 1998 ''[[Harper's]]'' magazine published a letter Phelps sent to Castro in which he praised Castro and lambasted the U.S. In 2004, when a pro-homosexual Cuban refugee announced plans to travel to [[Cuba]], Phelps sent another letter to Castro "warning" him of the man's plans and requesting travel visas for a group of WBC congregants so that they could follow the refugee around [[Havana]] with signs bearing anti-U.S. and anti-homosexual slogans. Castro also ignored that appeal.

Phelps also hates [[Scandinavia]]ns and [[Lutheranism|Lutherans]] in particular, whom he considers to be hellbound [[heretics]]. That may be because a Lutheran girl of Swedish origin, Luava Sundgren, separated his son Mark from the rest of his family. Phelps' hatred for [[Finland|Finns]] began in 1998, when a Finnish national humiliated him on a religious debate.{{fact}} As [[Tarja Halonen]] won the Finnish presidential election in 2000, Phelps made issue of the fact that Halonen, a lawyer by profession, though heterosexual herself, had in her youth worked as the [[human rights]] lawyer of SETA, a Finnish [[LGBT]] organization. Phelps threatened on his webpage to come with his congregation to burn the [[Flag of Finland|Finnish flag]] in front of the [[Eduskuntatalo|Finnish Parliament]]. This threat united Finnish [[lesbigay]]s, [[reservist]]s and [[hacker]]s, who cracked his [[website]] and defaced it by replacing every page with a Finnish flag. The Finnish police stated that his safety could not be guaranteed should he arrive in Finland, and that should he carry out his intentions he would be arrested for defacing the national flag. He did not carry out his threat.

Phelps seems to have targeted his hatred against [[Sweden]] instead of Finland after the prosecution in June, 2004, of Swedish [[pentecostal]] pastor [[Åke Green]] on hate-speech charges for comments about homosexuality; both countries are traditional Lutheran countries. On the Westboro website godhatessweden.com, Phelps declares the heavy Swedish losses in the [[2004 Indian Ocean earthquake]], initially calculated (exaggeratedly) at 20,000, to be God's punishment of Sweden for the prosecution of Green, and depicts a granite monument designed by himself to Green as a Christian [[martyr]], announcing plans to erect copies of it throughout the U.S. In response, Green has called Phelps "appalling" and "extremely unpleasant," stressing that while Phelps proclaims hatred for homosexuals and condemns them to Hell, Green hopes for them to repent and go to Heaven.

In 2003, before the fall of [[Saddam Hussein]] during the [[Iraq War]], Phelps wrote Hussein a letter praising his regime for being, in his opinion, "the only [[Muslim]] state that allows the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ to be freely and openly preached on the streets." Furthermore, he stated that he, if [[Federal government of the United States|U.S. Government]] and laws permitted and at the invitation of the [[Iraq]]i government, would like to send a delegation to [[Baghdad]] to "preach the Gospel" for one week. Hussein granted permission, and a group of WBC congregants traveled to Iraq to protest against the U.S. The parishioners stood on the streets of Baghdad and heavily patronized Baghdad establishments holding signs reading what they alway's read.

Phelps mourned the fall of Hussein's regime and has consistently criticized the invasion of Iraq, citing, "IRAQ+USA=SODOM." He also keeps a toll on his webpage celebrating the death of every American soldier killed and pronounces loyalty to Iraq.

==Spousal and child abuse==
Though the children who remain loyal to him claim that they were only spanked as children, there is an abundance of evidence to support the claims of two of his daughters and two of his sons that Phelps was physically abusive to his children and wife.

Phelps' sons Nate and Mark, who claim that they were among the most abused, each suffer from permanent debilitating injuries consistent with their accounts of Phelps beating them with a [[mattock]] handle. According to the boys, he woke them one Christmas Eve in the 1970s while under the influence, bent them over a bathtub, and struck them nearly 300 times with the mattock handle. {{ref|addict2}}

In 1972 Nate and Jon (whom today Topeka residents consider to be his father's most ardent and [[vulgar]] supporter) showed up to school covered in [[lesion|welt]]s, bruises, and bleeding wounds; the school nurse determined that Nate exhibited signs of [[shock]]. Social services then investigated the family, but Nate claims that their father threatened them with death if they spoke about their beatings. Phelps likewise issued threats against individual police officers and school staff, and filed a lawsuit against the school claiming they beat his children; the charges against Phelps, and Phelps' lawsuit, were dropped, but the affidavit that the school principal issued to social services remained on file as concrete evidence to support the stories of child abuse. {{ref|addict2}} Even Phelps' loyal daughter, Margie, who now acts as his personal attorney, admits the incident occurred. {{ref|addict2}}

In the early 1990s, Nate Phelps was diagnosed as suffering from [[post traumatic stress syndrome]]. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter7.html] He and his brother Mark have each been diagnosed as having suffered damage to the muscle tissue and tendons in their buttocks and legs, and both have scarring on their backsides, which they claim is the result of Phelps beating them with a custom-made, four-inch-wide [[strop]]. Around 1994 Nate was diagnosed as suffering from bone chips and severe damage to the muscle tissue in his knees. {{ref|addict2}}

Marge Phelps, the boys' mother, suffers from bone chips and severe cartilage damage in her right shoulder, consistent with a story three of the Phelps children tell about Fred throwing her down a flight of stairs. {{ref|addict2}}

Many of the Phelps children who remain at Westboro openly admit to using physical violence against their children; Phelps' son Jonathan boasted to the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' in 1994 that he regularly beat his wife and his children:

: Jonathon Phelps, who admits he beats his wife and four children, for emphasis reads from Proverbs, 13:24: "He that spareth his rod, hateth his son. But he that loveth him, chasteneth him betimes."

: ...Betty Phelps, wife of Fred, Jr., glowers... Anytime you spank a child, you're going to cause bruising, she explains. And sneers: "I'll bet your parents put a pillow in your pants." Jonathon, staring straight ahead and not looking at the reporter, states in a barely controlled voice of malevolent threat that, should the reporter tell it differently than just heard, said scribbler is evil and going to hell. Assuming there'll be space, the doomed dromedary of capital muckraking must tell it differently [lie]. {{ref|jon}}

On occasion members of the church have dared police and government officials to attempt legal action against them.

In spite of the evidence, Phelps' loyal children, especially Margie, Fred Jr., Rachel, and Rebecca, all deny that there was ever any physical or sexual abuse in the home, to them, their siblings, or their mother. {{ref|beaten}}

==Criminal record==
===United States===
===United States===
In 1994, Phelps was convicted of disorderly conduct for verbal harassment, and received two suspended 30-day jail sentences.<ref name="splcenter2001"/><ref name="musser1"/>
Phelps was first arrested in 1951 and found guilty of misdemeanor [[battery (crime)|battery]] after attacking a [[Pasadena, California|Pasadena]] police officer. He has since been arrested for [[assault]], battery, threats, [[trespassing]], [[disorderly conduct]], [[contempt of court]], and several other charges; each time, he (along with Westboro and its other members) has filed suit against the city, the police, and the arresting officers. Though he has been able to avoid prison time—often on technicalities —he has been convicted numerous times: {{ref|nn}} {{ref|timeline}} {{ref|muss}}
*1987: [[Witness intimidation]], [[threats]], and attempted [[extortion]] (charges were brought up by the Kansas Bar Association and used as evidence in Phelps' disbarment and the launching of disbarment hearings against his children)
*1992: [[Disorderly conduct]]
*1993: Disorderly conduct
*1993: [[Witness intimidation]]
*1994: [[Contempt of court]]
*1994: Two counts of [[assault]] (reduced to disorderly conduct on appeal)
*1995: [[Assault and battery]]
*1996: Two counts of sex with a minor relation.
*1997: Two counts of disorderly conduct
*1998: Disorderly conduct


Phelps' 1995 conviction for assault and battery carried a five-year prison sentence, with a mandatory 18 months to be served before he became eligible for parole. Phelps fought to be allowed to remain free until his appeals process went through. Days away from being arrested and sent to prison, a judge ruled that Phelps had been denied a [[speedy trial]] and that he was not required to serve any time.<ref name="splcenter2001"/><ref name="musser1"/>
Phelps' 1993 convictions stemmed from a [[raid]] on the offices of his family's lawfirm, "Phelps Chartered," in which $37,000 worth of equipment was seized as evidence. Phelps later sued the city of Topeka for seizing the equipment and won $43,000 in damages. By the time an appeals court overturned the ruling, the [[statute of limitations]] had expired and Phelps was allowed to keep the money.


=== Canada===
Phelps' 1995 conviction for assault and battery carried a five-year prison sentence, with a mandatory 18 months to be served before he became eligible for parole. Phelps fought to be allowed to remain free until his appeals process went through. Days away from being arrested and sent to prison, a judge ruled that Phelps had been [[Denial of a speedy trial|denied a speedy trial]] and that he was not required to serve any time. {{ref|timeline}} {{ref|muss}}
In August 2008, Canadian officials learned of WBC's intent to stage a protest at the funeral of [[Killing of Tim McLean|Tim McLean]], a [[Winnipeg]] resident who was killed on a bus. The protests intended to convey the message that the man's murder was God's response to Canadian laws permitting abortion, homosexuality, divorce and remarriage. In response, Canadian officials barred the organization's members from entering the country.<ref>{{cite news |date=8 August 2008 |title=Church members enter Canada, aiming to picket bus victim's funeral |newspaper=CBC |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/church-members-enter-canada-aiming-to-picket-bus-victim-s-funeral-1.703285 |access-date=January 14, 2013}}</ref>


===United Kingdom===
In December 1996, in the wake of Fred Phelps' assault and battery conviction, two Topeka police officers came forward claiming that then-police chief Beavers had, in 1993, enacted a "no-arrest" policy that actively ignored complaints against Phelps and WBC members unless they were blatantly physically violent and/or witnessed by several persons. Beavers was quoted as saying:
On February 18, 2009, two days before the Westboro Baptist Church's first UK picket, the United Kingdom [[Home Office]] announced that Fred Phelps and Shirley Phelps-Roper would be refused entry and that "other church members could also be flagged and stopped if they tried to enter Britain".<ref>{{cite news|url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/hampshire/7898972.stm?lss|title=Anti-Gay Preachers Banned from UK|date=February 19, 2009|work=[[BBC Online]]|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref> In May 2009, he and his daughter Shirley were placed on the [[Home Office]]'s "name and shame" [[List of individuals banned from entering the United Kingdom|list of people barred from entering the UK]] for "fostering hatred which might lead to inter-community violence".<ref>{{citation|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/may/05/list-of-people-banned-from-uk|title=The Home Office List of People Banned from the UK|work=The Guardian|date=May 5, 2009|access-date=December 10, 2012}}</ref>


==In the media==
:The Phelpses are not going to live in my house. Don't these officers know the Phelpses can sue us and take our houses? Commander, do you understand my order?
In 1993, Phelps appeared on a first-season episode of the talk show ''[[Ricki Lake (TV series)|Ricki Lake]]'', alleging that homosexuals and "anyone who carries the AIDS virus" deserved to die. When Phelps and his son-in-law Charles Hockenbarger (married to Phelps' daughter Rachel) became increasingly belligerent, Lake ordered the Phelps family to leave the studio. During a commercial break, the two were forced off the set and escorted out of the building by security.<ref>[https://www.baltimoresun.com/1993/12/06/respect-earns-ricki-lake-success-on-tv/ "Respect earns Ricki Lake success on TV"] from ''[[Baltimore Sun]]'' (December 6, 1993)</ref> After Phelps died, Lake [[Twitter|tweeted]] that when he had been on the show, he had told her that she worshipped her own rectum — a remark that led her to take action off-stage to have Phelps removed from the set.<ref>{{cite tweet|number=446772962150989824|user=RickiLake|title=#FredPhelps was on my original talk show in 1993 where he told me I worshipped my rectum. I threw him out mid-show. #GoodRiddanceFredPhelps|date=March 20, 2014}}</ref>


The Phelps family was the subject of the 2007 TV program ''[[The Most Hated Family in America]]'', presented on the [[BBC]] by [[Louis Theroux]].<ref>{{cite news|url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/6507971.stm|title=America's Most Hated Family|last=Theroux|first=Louis|date=March 30, 2007|work=[[BBC Online]]|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref> Four years after his original documentary, Theroux produced a follow-up program ''[[America's Most Hated Family in Crisis]]'', which was prompted by news of family members leaving the church.<ref>{{citation|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-12919646|title=Westboro Baptist Church Revisited|last=Theorux| first=Louis|date=March 31, 2011|work=[[BBC Online]]|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref> Phelps' son [[Nathan Phelps|Nate]] has broken ranks with the family and in an interview with [[Peter W. Klein]] on the Canadian program ''The Standard'', he characterized his father as abusive and warned the Phelps family could turn violent.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-cutbirth/phelps-son-says-god-hates_b_533132.html|title=Phelps' Son Says "God Hates Fags" Church Could Turn Violent| last=Cutbirth|first=Joe|date=April 11, 2010|work=[[The Huffington Post]]|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref> Writing in response to Phelps' death in 2014, Theroux described Phelps as "an angry bigot who thrived on conflict", and expressed the view that his death would not lead to any "huge changes" in the church, as he saw it as operating with the dynamics of a large family rather than a cult.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://louistheroux.com/thoughts-on-the-passing-of-pastor-phelps-and-the-wesboro-baptist-church|title=Thoughts on the Passing of Pastor Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church|date=March 22, 2014|access-date=March 25, 2014|archive-date=March 25, 2014|archive-url=https://archive.today/20140325160123/http://louistheroux.com/thoughts-on-the-passing-of-pastor-phelps-and-the-wesboro-baptist-church}}</ref> Theroux returned for a third documentary in 2019, titled ''[[Surviving America's Most Hated Family]]''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.her.ie/entertainment/new-louis-theroux-documentary-itching-see-airs-weekend-472888|title=The new Louis Theroux documentary we're all itching to see airs this weekend|website=Her.ie|date=July 13, 2019 |language=en|access-date=July 14, 2019}}</ref>
An investigation was launched by the City of Topeka and the Topeka Sheriff's department in 1996. It was determined that Chief Beavers had been allowing Phelps and WBC protestors to commit crimes without arrest, and that Phelps and WBC members had taken advantage of their knowledge of the policy by becoming more abusive towards Topeka citizens; in following years, Topeka citizens formed a loose [[support group]] on the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'' [[message board]] recalling abuse they had suffered from Westboro members during this period, which included threats of sexual assault to women and children; some claimed that they had caught members of Westboro going through their garbage looking for personal information to use against them. Following the findings of the city and Sheriff's office, Beavers was asked to resign, and his successor immediately repealed the "no arrest" policy.


[[Kevin Smith]] produced a [[Horror (genre)|horror]] film titled ''[[Red State (2011 film)|Red State]]'' featuring a religious fundamentalist villain inspired by Phelps.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1598264/20081030/story.jhtml|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101117041319/http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1598264/20081030/story.jhtml|url-status=dead|archive-date=November 17, 2010|title=Kevin Smith Eschews Comedy in Favor of Horror For 'Red State' – But Will It Ever Get Made?|last=Adler|first=Shawn|date=October 31, 2008|work=MTV|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.nme.com/filmandtv/news/casting-for-kevin-smiths-political-horror-red-state-begins/181331|title=Casting for Kevin Smith's Political Horror 'Red State' Begins|date=August 4, 2010|work=[[NME]]|access-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref>
In addition, Phelps could be tried for the alleged abuse inflicted on his family if not for the statute of limitations.


Phelps appeared in ''[[A Union in Wait]]'', a 2001 [[Sundance Channel (United States)|Sundance Channel]] documentary film about same-sex marriage, directed by [[Ryan Butler]] after Phelps picketed [[Wake Forest Baptist Church]] at [[Wake Forest University]] over a proposed same-sex union ceremony.
===Canada===
On one occasion, Phelps and his congregation had their signs confiscated by customs, and responded by going to the federal capital and burning and spitting on the [[Canadian flag]], and threatening to [[urinate]] and [[defecate]] on it. Since that time, Canada has passed [[hate crime]] legislation, alternatingly referred to by the informal "Fred Phelps Law" and "[[Jack Chick]] Law." Phelps has also claimed that his congregation, along with him, have been [http://www.kapelovitz.com/phelps.htm arrested in Canada] for hate speech. Should Phelps ever try to enter Canada again, he would be arrested and tried for violation of hate crime laws, a fact which prompted the founding of "Godhatescanada.com."


==Excommunication and death==
There are also rumors that Phelps was once arrested (but not charged) for [[obscene]] conduct with another man, and that this prompted his anti-gay stance.
Fred Phelps preached his final Sunday sermon on September 1, 2013. Five weeks later, sermons resumed from various members.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/audio/index.html |title=Sermons, Parodies, Hymns And Other Audio From Westboro Baptist Church |publisher=Godhatesfags.com |access-date=March 20, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Fred Phelps Sr: 'on the edge of death'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/faith/fred-phelps-sr-on-the-edge-of-death-9198142.html|newspaper=[[The Independent]]|date=March 18, 2014}}</ref>


On March 15, 2014, [[Nathan Phelps]], Phelps' estranged son, reported that Phelps was in very poor health and was receiving [[hospice]] care.<ref name="path2014">{{cite web|url=http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2014/03/15/fred-phelps-founder-of-the-god-hates-fags-westboro-baptist-church-is-on-the-edge-of-death/|title=Fred Phelps, Founder of the 'God Hates Fags' Westboro Baptist Church, is on the 'Edge of Death'|publisher=Patheos|date=March 15, 2014|author=Hemant Mehta|author-link=Hemant Mehta}}</ref> He said that Phelps had been [[Excommunication|excommunicated]] from the church in August 2013, and then moved into a house where he "basically stopped eating and drinking".<ref name=path2014 /><ref name="wap2014">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/founder-of-anti-gay-kansas-church-in-care-facility/2014/03/16/e9fc6ad8-ad2a-11e3-b8b3-44b1d1cd4c1f_story.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140316234308/http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/founder-of-anti-gay-kansas-church-in-care-facility/2014/03/16/e9fc6ad8-ad2a-11e3-b8b3-44b1d1cd4c1f_story.html|archive-date=March 16, 2014|title=Founder of anti-gay Kansas church in care facility|newspaper=Washington Post|date=March 17, 2014}}</ref><ref name="phelps-excommunication">{{cite news|last=Fry|first=Steve|title=Elders excommunicate Phelps after power struggle, call for kindness within church|url=http://m.cjonline.com/news/2014-03-17/elders-excommunicate-phelps-after-power-struggle-call-kindness-within-church|access-date=March 20, 2014|newspaper=The Topeka Capital-Journal|date=March 17, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160730201037/http://m.cjonline.com/news/2014-03-17/elders-excommunicate-phelps-after-power-struggle-call-kindness-within-church|archive-date=July 30, 2016}}</ref> His statements were supported by his brother, Mark. Church spokesman Steve Drain declined to answer questions about Phelps' excommunication, and denied that the church had a single leader.<ref name=Biles>{{cite news|title=Son of Fred Phelps Sr. says father voted out of church. WBC spokesman: Church doesn't have a designated leader of church, adding WBC doesn't operate that way|url=http://cjonline.com/news/local/2014-03-16/son-fred-phelps-sr-says-father-voted-out-church|access-date=March 16, 2014|newspaper=[[Topeka Capital-Journal]]|date=March 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161229222652/http://cjonline.com/news/local/2014-03-16/son-fred-phelps-sr-says-father-voted-out-church|archive-date=December 29, 2016}}</ref> The church's official website said that membership status is private and did not confirm or deny the excommunication.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.sparenot.com/|title=Recent Media FAQ|work=godhatesfags.com|date=March 16, 2014|access-date=March 17, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140411035432/http://blogs.sparenot.com/|archive-date=April 11, 2014}}</ref>
==Health==
In Topeka, Kansas, there is much speculation regarding Phelps' health. He is reported to be suffering from an advanced form of [[liver cancer]] due to his drinking (a rumor which, started in the late '90s, would appear to be false or no longer true) or [[Parkinson's Disease]] and has made few recent appearances. Recent photographs showing apparent partial facial [[paralysis]] suggest that he may have suffered a very mild [[stroke]] for which he was never hospitalized. Also, the length and incoherence of many of his recent sermons, as well as a large number of bizarre claims (including "George Bush worships [[Mr. Peanut]], whose name is the great god Goober"), suggest to many that he is suffering from [[Alzheimer's disease]], senility, or has suffered brain damage due to his [[amphetamine]] and [[barbiturate]] addiction in the 1960s and his later alleged alcoholism.


Phelps died of natural causes shortly before midnight on March 19, 2014, at the age of 84.<ref name="Hanna">{{cite news|last=Hanna|first=John|title=Anti-gay pastor Fred Phelps Sr. dies|url=https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/anti-gay-pastor-fred-phelps-sr-dies-84-22986518|newspaper=[[ABC News (United States)|ABC News]]}}</ref><ref name="BBC 967">{{cite news|title=Anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church leader Fred Phelps dies|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26669967|work=[[BBC]]|date=March 20, 2014|access-date=March 20, 2014}}</ref><ref name="cnn-fredphelpsdead">{{cite news|last=Burke|first=Daniel|title=Westboro church founder Fred Phelps dies|url=http://www.cnn.com/2014/03/20/us/westboro-church-founder-dead/|access-date=March 20, 2014|newspaper=CNN.com|date=March 20, 2014}}</ref> His daughter, [[Shirley Phelps-Roper|Shirley]], stated that a funeral for her father would not be held because the church does not "worship the dead".<ref name="cnn-fredphelpsdead" /> According to Nathan Phelps, Fred Phelps' body was immediately cremated,<ref name="Traumatic Loss">{{cite book |last1=Thompson|first1=Neil|last2=Cox|first2=Gerry R.|last3=Stevenson|first3=Robert G.|date=January 28, 2017|title=Handbook of Traumatic Loss A Guide to Theory and Practice|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nqfZDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT458|publisher=Routledge|page=286|isbn=978-1-138-18233-2}}</ref> and according to his granddaughter [[Megan Phelps-Roper]], Phelps' cremated remains were buried in an unmarked grave in Kansas.<ref>{{cite book |title=Unfollow: A Memoir of Loving and Leaving the Westboro Baptist Church |last1 = Phelps-Roper|first1 = Megan|date = October 8, 2019}}</ref>
==People targeted by Fred Phelps==
:''Main article: [[Targets of Westboro Baptist Church]] - there is also more information in the main [[Westboro Baptist Church]] article.''


Phelps had been reportedly suffering from some form of [[dementia]] in his final year, and started behaving
Since the early 1990s, Phelps has targeted several individuals and groups in the public eye for criticism after their deaths, prominent examples include President [[Ronald Reagan]], Supreme Court Justice [[William Rehnquist]], National Football League star [[Reggie White]], murdered college student [[Matthew Shepard]], the late children's television host [[Fred Rogers]], Scandinavians, [[Cindy Sheehan]], and [[Military of the United States|US soldiers]] killed in [[Iraq]]. This clip features Shirley Phelps, a daughter of Fred whom appears on Fox T.V defending their church and attacking homosexuality. [http://www.break.com/index/hannityloon.html] Elsewhere and more recently, the [[miners]] who died in the [[2006 Sago Mine disaster]] and the late [[Coretta Scott King]] have been targeted by Phelps and the WBC. The groups and individuals are attacked for being [[homosexual]], supporting homosexuality, failing to condemn homosexuality, or their deaths are suggested to be caused by [[God]] as punishment for the USA's tolerance for homosexuals.
irrationally. This led to church members believing that God had condemned him.<ref>{{cite book |title=Unfollow: A Memoir of Loving and Leaving the Westboro Baptist Church |isbn = 978-0-374-71581-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NZmEDwAAQBAJ&q=unfollow+gramps+was+the+heretic+now&pg=PT382 |access-date=January 22, 2020|last1 = Phelps-Roper|first1 = Megan|date = October 8, 2019| publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux }}</ref> It has been stated that Phelps "had a softening of heart at the end of his life,"<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Chen |first1=Adrian |title=Conversion via Twitter |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/23/conversion-via-twitter-westboro-baptist-church-megan-phelps-roper |magazine=The New Yorker |date=November 16, 2015 |access-date=March 3, 2020}}</ref> according to accounts published in a memoir written by Phelps' granddaughter Megan Phelps-Roper, and reporting from ''[[The New Yorker]]'' citing former members of the church.<ref name="Chen 2015">{{cite magazine |last1=Chen |first1=Adrian |title=Conversion via Twitter |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/23/conversion-via-twitter-westboro-baptist-church-megan-phelps-roper |magazine=The New Yorker |date=November 16, 2015 |access-date=May 6, 2020 |language=en}}</ref> This includes an incident in 2013, in which Phelps is said to have stepped outside the church and called over to members of [[Planting Peace]], a nonprofit that bought a house on the other street and painted it with an LGBT rainbow, saying: "You're good people!"<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lasdun |first1=James |title=Kinks and Convolutions |url=https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n04/james-lasdun/kinks-and-convolutions |journal=The London Review of Books |date=February 9, 2020 |volume=42 |issue=4 |access-date=March 3, 2020}}</ref> In an interview with ''[[NPR]]'', Megan Phelps-Roper said this outburst was "the proximate cause" of Phelps being excommunicated,<ref>{{cite web |last1=Gross |first1=Terry |title=Fresh Air, October 11 2019 | url=https://www.npr.org/transcripts/768894901 |website=WBFO NPR |publisher=NPR |access-date=March 3, 2020}}</ref> a claim that the church has denied.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Mangan |first1=Lucy |title=Louis Theroux: Surviving America's Most Hated Family review – a deeply uncomfortable watch |url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2019/jul/14/louis-theroux-surviving-americas-most-hated-family-review-a-deeply-uncomfortable-watch |website=The Guardian |date=July 14, 2019 |access-date=March 3, 2020 |quote="On the other hand, Theroux hears a persistent rumour that Gramps died excommunicated after shouting "You're good people" at the gay rights charity HQ across the street. Did dementia strip him down to a better man at the core? Was it a moment of simple madness that meant nothing? Or was it, of course, demonic possession? It seems clear, however, that something has shaken members. Is the gentler preaching a sign that cracks in the certainties upon which Gramps's church was built are starting to appear? No one is willing to admit the event even happened."}}</ref> According to Phelps' grandson and former church member Zach Phelps-Roper, Phelps' actions were regarded as "rank blasphemy" by the church members.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/23/fred-phelps-equality_n_5378433.html|title=Fred Phelps May Have Had A Change Of Heart Toward Gays, Relative Says|first=Cavan|last=Sieczkowski|date=May 23, 2014|via=Huff Post}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=644133125676725&id=427599210663452|title=Equality House|website=www.facebook.com}}</ref>


==Proposed bans==
==Electoral history==
'''Democratic primary for [[Governor of Kansas]], 1990'''
{{sources}}
* [[Joan Finney]]: 81,250 (47.18%)
As of [[April 19]], [[2006]], at least seventeen states are either considering bans on protests near funeral sites immediately before and after the ceremonies, or have already banned them. These states are: [[Illinois]], [[Indiana]], [[Iowa]] [http://www.thatvideosite.com/view/2178.html], [[Kansas]], [[Kentucky]], [[Louisiana]] [http://www.wwltv.com/local/stories/wwl041806jbfunerals.4b3d754c.html], [[Maryland]], [[Michigan]], [[Missouri]], which passed the law, [[Nebraska]], [[Ohio]], [[Oklahoma]], [[South Dakota]], [[Vermont]], [[Virginia]], [[West Virginia]] and [[Texas]]. [[Wisconsin]] has instituted such a ban. These bans are in response to the [[God Hates Fags]] rallies of Phelps near the places where funerals of [[Military of the United States|US soldiers]] killed in [[Iraq]] are taking place. These bans seem almost certain to pass, and although their constitutional validity has been questioned, their validity has not yet been tested in the courts.
* [[John W. Carlin|John Carlin]]: 79,406 (46.11%)
* Fred Phelps: 11,572 (6.72%)


'''Democratic primary for [[United States Senate]], Kansas 1992'''
On May 1, 2006, Phelps supporter Bart McQueary filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the ban in Kentucky. [http://news.kypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060502/NEWS02/605020348/1014/NEWS02]
* Gloria O'Dell: 111,015 (69.20%)
* Fred Phelps: 49,416 (30.80%)


'''Democratic primary for Governor of Kansas, 1994'''
==Patriot Guard Riders==
* [[Jim Slattery]]: 84,389 (53.02%)
To counter the Phelps' protests at funerals of fallen soldiers, a group of motorcycle riders has formed the [[Patriot Guard Riders]] to provide a nonviolent, volunteer buffer between the protestors and mourners. While the proposed bans might be found unconstitutional, the Patriot Guard riders are protected by the same First Amendment freedoms of assembly, expression and religion which the Westboro Baptists have used as their own defense.
* [[Joan Wagnon]]: 42,115 (26.46%)
* [[Jim Francisco]]: 16,048 (10.08%)
* Leslie Kitchenmaster: 11,253 (7.07%)
* Fred Phelps: 5,349 (3.36%)


'''Democratic primary for Governor of Kansas, 1998'''
==Legitimacy==
* [[Tom Sawyer (Kansas politician)|Tom Sawyer]]: 88,248 (85.28%)
* Fred Phelps: 15,233 (14.72%)<ref>See {{cite web|url=http://www.ourcampaigns.com/CandidateDetail.html?CandidateID=22659|title=Fred Phelps|date=September 2, 2012|access-date=December 12, 2012}} for all election statistics</ref>


==See also==
Some suspect Phelps of being an [[agent provocateur]]. [http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/03/12/060312122104.pgrezzqi.html]:
{{Portal bar|Biography|Kansas|Mississippi|LGBTQ}}

* [[Burke family (Castlebar)]]
:The group is so outrageous that some among the extreme-right have speculated that Phelps is a plant aimed at giving the anti-gay movement a bad name, said Mark Potok, the director of the intelligence project at the Southern Poverty Law Center which tracks hate crimes.
* [[Christian terrorism]]

* [[Christianity and homosexuality]]
However, such speculation has come from across the spectrum, not only the political right. [[Libertarian]] author Keith R. Wood made this suggestion in a column in 2004, and it has been repeated elsewhere since then.
* [[Hate group]]
* [[The Bible and homosexuality]]
{{clear|right}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
* [http://blank.org/addict Addicted to Hate: The Fred Phelps Story] - In 1994, a reporter working for Stauffer Communications, Inc. filed a [[lawsuit]] about ownership of a book he had been researching for them, which details Phelps' life and activities. Because the text of the book was entered as Exhibit A, the text entered into [[public domain]].


== External links ==
#{{note|mark}} Phelps, Mark. "Letter from a Son Who Left." [http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps03.shtml]
{{Wikiquote}}
#{{note|interviewjoe}} Hamilton, Joe Clay. Personal interview conducted by Topeka Capital Journal. 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter3.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 3]
{{Wikinews category}}
#{{note|mcinterview}} McAllister, B.H. Personal interview conducted by Topeka Capital Journal. 1993. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter3.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 3]
<!-- Please read the guidelines at [[Wikipedia:External Links]] BEFORE adding new links here! Keep in mind that Wikipedia is not a collection of links, that's what Google is for. New links should provide an essential supplement to the content and links already in the article; if it's not something new and significantly different from what is here already, please don't add it on. Thanks.
#{{note|interviewsis}} Capron, Martha Jean. Personal interview conducted by Topeka Capital Journal. 1993. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter3.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 3]
-->
#{{note|briggs}} Briggs, . Personal interview conducted by Topeka Capital Journal. 1993. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter3.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 4]
* [https://www.cjonline.com/news/local/2014-03-20/phelps-life-turned-brilliance-hatred Phelps' life turned from brilliance to hatred] from [[The Topeka Capital-Journal]]
#{{note|phelpsview}} Phelps, Fred. Personal interview conducted by Topeka Capital Journal. 1994. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter4.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 4]
: ''For external links related to [[Westboro Baptist Church]] and not Phelps specifically, [[Westboro Baptist Church#External links|see this section]].''
#{{note|rift}} Taschler, Joe, and Fry, Steven. "Phelps at Odds with Father, Sister." [http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps14.shtml]
#{{note|sermon}}Phelps, Fred. Sermon delivered at Eastside Baptist Church, 1950-1951. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter4.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 4]
#{{note|unknown}} Personal interview conducted by the Topeka Capital Journal with anonymous former Eastside Congregant. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter4.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 4]
#{{note|markview}} Phelps, Mark. Personal interview conducted with the Topeka Capital Journal. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter4.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 4]
#{{note|margieview}} Phelps, Margie. Personal interview conducted by the Topeka Capital Journal. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter5.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 5]
#{{note|co}} Personal interview with anonymous former co-worker of Fred Phelps, conducted by the Topeka Capital Journal. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter6.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 6]
#{{note|pre}} Fry, Steven, and Taschler, Joe. "Phelps flock: Afterlife is prearranged." [http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps18.shtml]
#{{note|timeline}} Timeline of the life of Fred Phelps, Sr. Compiled by the Southern Poverty Law Center. [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=184]
#{{note|ties}} Ivers, Kevin. "Gore Political Ties to God Hates Fags Revealed." Log Cabin Republicans, Washington branch. [[25 October]] [[2000]]. [http://www.lcrga.com/archive/200010251159.shtml]
#{{note|wrap}} Friedman, et. al. "This Way Out Newswrap, [[25 January]] [[1997]]." [http://www.qrd.org/qrd/media/radio/thiswayout/summary/newswrap/1997/461-01.27.97]
#{{note|flier}} Westboro Baptist Church Flier, distributed [[18 November]]. 2002. [http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/nov2002/Al_Gore_11-18-2002.pdf]
#{{note|365}} 365Gay.com staff. "Phelps Clan Forces Vote on Gay Rights Law. [[5 January]] [[2005]]. [http://www.365gay.com/newscon05/01/010505topeka.htm]
#{{note|4}} 1998 Kansas Primary Results. Compiled by Congressional Quarterly. [http://edition.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1998/08/05/kansas.results/]
#{{note|Jon}} Phelps, Jon. Personal interview conducted by the Topeka Capital Journal. Reprinted in [http://blank.org/addict/chapter2.html Addicted to Hate, Chapter 2]
#{{note|beaten}} Hays, Kristen L. "We weren't beaten, Phelps siblings say." The Topeka Capital Journal.[http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps23.shtml]
#{{note|nn}} Notable Names Database. Fred Phelps entry. [http://www.nndb.com/people/908/000025833/]
#{{note|muss}} Musser, Rick. "Fred Phelps versus Topeka." Republished from Culture Wars & Local Politics, ed. Elaine B. Sharp. University of Press Kansas. 2000.
#{{note|addict1}} Fry, Steven, John Michael Bell, and Joe Taschler. Addicted to Hate. Chapter 1: Public Domain., 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter1.html]
#{{note|addict2}} Fry, Steven, John Michael Bell, and Joe Taschler. Addicted to Hate. Chapter 2: Public Domain., 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter2.html]
#{{note|addict3}} The Transformation of Fred Phelps, Topeka Capital-Journal, 1994. [http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps01.shtml]
#{{note|addict4}} Fry, Steven, John Michael Bell, and Joe Taschler. Addicted to Hate. Chapter 4: Public Domain., 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter4.html]
#{{note|addict5}} Fry, Steven, John Michael Bell, and Joe Taschler. Addicted to Hate. Chapter 5: Public Domain., 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter5.html]
#{{note|addict6}} Fry, Steven, John Michael Bell, and Joe Taschler. Addicted to Hate. Chapter 6: Public Domain., 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter6.html]
#{{note|addict6}} Fry, Steven, John Michael Bell, and Joe Taschler. Addicted to Hate. Chapter 7: Public Domain., 1994. [http://blank.org/addict/chapter7.html]
#{{note|gorevalues}} [http://www.hatemongers.com/images/gore_family_values.jpg]
#{{note|fox}} [http://www.break.com/index/hannityloon.html]

==External links==
===Further reading===
* [http://cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/specialsection.shtml Hate for the love of God]—biographical special section from the ''Topeka Capital-Journal'', first published in 1994
* [http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/religion/fred-phelps/ Rotten.com's Fred Phelps timeline and quotes page]
* [http://365gay.com/Newscon06/02/020406Phelps.htm Fred Phelps Confronted], by Jeff Golimowski, chief investigative reporter for [http://www.kake.com/ KAKE-TV] in [[Wichita]], [[Kansas]] - 04 February 2006
* [http://www.sierratimes.com/04/10/27/critic.htm FAKE CRUSADE], column by Keith R. Wood suggesting that Phelps' campaign is actually intended to smear Christians
* [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intpro.jsp Southern Poverty Law Center] 'Intelligence Report' monitors U.S. hate groups.
* [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?pid=421 A City Held Hostage] Southern Poverty Law Center article on Phelp's activities in Topeka

===Westboro Baptist Church-affiliated sites===
* [http://www.godhatesfags.com godhatesfags.com]
* [http://www.priestsrapeboys.com priestsrapeboys.com]
* [http://www.godhatesamerica.com godhatesamerica.com]
* [http://www.godhatescanada.com godhatescanada.com]
* [http://www.godhatessweden.com godhatessweden.com]
* [http://www.thesignsofthetimes.net thesignsofthetimes.net]
* [http://www.smellthebrimstone.com smellthebrimstone.com]
* [http://www.hatemongers.com hatemongers.com]

===Supporters of Phelps===
* [[Bart McQueary]] is a former [[Professional wrestling|pro-wrestling]] promoter who became a supporter of Westboro, though he lives in Kentucky. He joins them whenever they picket in Kentucky.
* [[Peter J. Peters]] is the de facto spokesperson for the [[Christian Identity]] movement, and the founder of [http://www.scripturesforamerica.org/ Scriptures for America], a web-church similar to Westboro. He sells cassette tapes of Phelps' sermons in the backs of his catalogues.

===Critics of Phelps===
* [http://www.godhateswbc.com godhateswbc.com]
* [http://www.godhateshomophobes.com godhateshomophobes.com]
* [http://www.godlovesfags.com godlovesfags.com]
* [http://www.baptistwatch.org BaptistWatch.org]—contains the biography of Phelps entered as an exhibit in the Stauffer Communications Inc. lawsuit
* [http://www.godhatesfredphelps.com/ godhatesfredphelps.com] —speaks of hate crimes committed against others.
* [http://www.wcuweb.org/ Wisconsin Christians United] —Organization headed by radical [[Milwaukee, Wisconsin|Milwaukee]] street preacher [[Ralph Ovadal]], who, while employing protest tactics similar to Phelps, is critical of him, and also claims Phelps' female family members once physically attacked one of his followers.
* [http://www.goodasyou.org/good_as_you/westboro/ Goodasyou.org] Humorous gay activists that have an entire section dedicated to Westboro Baptist's antics. The name is taken from British acronym, G.A.Y.
* [http://www.godhatesphred.com godhatesphred.com] Message Board based in Lawrence Kansas to monitor his activities (link on the left hand toolbar)

===Parodies===
* [http://www.danstheman.com/SPECIALS/2005/phelps.obit/ A fictional CNN-style obituary of Phelps]
* [http://www.godhatesfigs.com godhatesfigs.com]—a spoof of Phelps's original site
* [http://www.godhatesrags.com godhatesrags.com]—another spoof of Phelps's original site
* [http://www.godhatesshrimp.com godhatesshrimp.com]—another spoof of Phelps's original site
* [http://godhatesneworleans.com/ godhatesneworleans.com] —A domain registered by a member of the website [[Something Awful]] to prevent Phelps from possibly claiming it for his own. It was suspected that Phelps would register the [[hostname]] in the wake of [[Hurricane Katrina]]. Redirects to the American [[Red Cross]] website after approximately 5 seconds.


; Biographical information
{{featured article}}
* {{IMDb name|1662196}}


{{Authority control}}
[[Category:1929 births|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:American activists|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:American criminals|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Anti-Catholicism|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Anti-Semitic people|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Baptists|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Cult leaders|Phelps. Fred]]
[[Category:Disbarred attorneys|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:LGBT rights opposition|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Living people|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Ministers|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Non-graduate alumni of West Point|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:People from Kansas|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:People from Mississippi|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Westboro Baptist Church|Phelps, Fred]]
[[Category:Famous Baptist Ministers]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Phelps Sr., Fred Waldron}}
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Latest revision as of 00:44, 21 December 2024

Fred Phelps
Phelps in 2002
Born
Fred Waldron Phelps

(1929-11-13)November 13, 1929[1][2]
DiedMarch 19, 2014(2014-03-19) (aged 84)[2]
Education
Occupation(s)Pastor, lawyer[2]
OrganizationWestboro Baptist Church
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Margie Marie Simms
(m. 1952)
Children13, including
Shirley Phelps-Roper and
Nathan Phelps
RelativesMegan Phelps-Roper (granddaughter)

Fred Waldron Phelps Sr. (November 13, 1929 – March 19, 2014) was an American minister and disbarred lawyer who served as the pastor of the Westboro Baptist Church, worked as a civil rights attorney, and ran for statewide election in Kansas. A divisive and controversial figure, he gained national attention for his homophobic views and protests near the funerals of gay people, AIDS victims, military veterans, and disaster victims who he believed were killed as a result of God punishing the U.S. for having "bankrupt values" and tolerating homosexuality. Phelps founded the Westboro Baptist Church, a Topeka, Kansas-based independent Primitive Baptist congregation, in 1955. It has been described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as "arguably the most obnoxious and rabid hate group in America".[3] Its signature slogan, "God Hates Fags", remains the name of the group's principal website.

In addition to funerals, Phelps and his followers—mostly his own immediate family members—picketed gay pride gatherings, high-profile political events, university commencement ceremonies, live performances of The Laramie Project, and functions sponsored by mainstream Christian groups with which he had no affiliation, arguing it was their sacred duty to warn others of God's anger. He continued doing so in the face of numerous legal challenges—some of which reached the U.S. Supreme Court—and near-universal opposition and contempt from other religious groups and the general public.[4] Laws enacted at both the federal[5][6][7] and state[8] levels for the specific purpose of curtailing his disruptive activities were limited in their effectiveness due to the Constitutional protections afforded to Phelps under the First Amendment.

Gay rights supporters denounced him as a producer of anti-gay propaganda and violence-inspiring hate speech, and even Christians from fundamentalist denominations distanced themselves from him.[9] In particular, Phelps and his church routinely targeted the Catholic Church with picket signs and online websites claiming that "priests rape boys" and "fag priests" and focusing on the Catholic Church sex scandals, calling the pope "The Godfather of pedophiles".[10][11][12] Although Phelps died in 2014, the Westboro Baptist Church remains in operation. It continues to conduct regular demonstrations outside movie theaters, universities, government buildings, and other facilities in Topeka and elsewhere, and is still characterized as a hate group by the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center.[13][14]

Early life and education

[edit]
Phelps in 1962

Fred Waldron Phelps was born on November 13, 1929, in Meridian, Mississippi, the elder of two children of Catherine Idalette (née Johnston) and Fred Wade Phelps. His father was a railroad policeman for the Columbus and Greenville Railway and a devout Methodist; his mother was a homemaker.[2][1] Catherine Phelps died of esophageal cancer in 1935 at the age of 28.[1] Her aunt, Irene Jordan, helped care for Fred and his younger sister Martha Jean until December 1944, when his father married Olive Briggs, a 39-year-old woman who was divorced.[1]

Fred distinguished himself scholastically and was an Eagle Scout.[15] He also was a member of Phi Kappa, a high school social fraternity, president of the Young Peoples Department of Central United Methodist Church and was honored as the best drilled member of the Mississippi Junior State Guard, a unit similar to the Reserve Officer Training Corps. He graduated from high school at 16 years old, ranking sixth in his graduating class of 213 students, and was the class orator at his commencement.[2][16] After graduating from high school he received an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point; but after attending a tent revival meeting, decided to pursue a religious calling instead.[1]

In September 1947, at the age of 17, he was ordained a Southern Baptist minister and moved to Cleveland, Tennessee, to attend Bob Jones College (now Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina).[2][3] A combination of Phelps's refusal of the West Point appointment (which his father had worked hard to obtain), his abandonment of his father's beloved Methodist faith, and his father's remarriage to a divorced woman (Phelps would later become an outspoken critic of divorce) precipitated a lifelong estrangement from his father and stepmother—and by some accounts, from his sister as well. Phelps apparently never spoke to his family members again, and returned all of their letters and birthday cards, as well as Christmas gifts for his children, unopened.[17]

Phelps dropped out of Bob Jones College in 1948.[18] He moved to California and became a street preacher while attending John Muir College in Pasadena. The June 11, 1951 issue of Time magazine included a story on Phelps, who lectured fellow students about "sins committed on campus by students and teachers", including "promiscuous petting, evil language, profanity, cheating, teachers' filthy jokes in classrooms, and pandering to the lusts of the flesh." When the college ordered him to stop, citing a California law that forbade the teaching of religion on any public school campus, he moved his sermons across the street.[19] In October 1951, Phelps met Margie Marie Simms in Arizona and married her in May 1952.[2][20]

In 1954, Phelps, his pregnant wife, and their newborn son moved to Topeka, Kansas, where he was hired by the East Side Baptist Church as an associate pastor. The following year, the church's leadership opened Westboro Baptist Church on the other side of town, and Phelps became its pastor.[21]

Although the new church was ostensibly Independent Baptist, Phelps preached a doctrine very similar to that of the Primitive Baptists, who believe in scriptural literalism — that Christian biblical scripture is literally true — and that only a predetermined number of people selected for redemption before the world was created will be saved on Judgment Day.[18] His vitriolic preaching alienated church leaders and most of the original congregation, who either returned to East Side Baptist or joined other congregations, leaving him with a small following consisting almost entirely of his own relatives and close friends.[22]

Phelps was forced to support himself selling vacuum cleaners, baby strollers, and insurance; later, some of his 13 children were reportedly compelled to sell candy door-to-door for several hours each day. In 1972, two companies sued Westboro Baptist for failing to pay for the candy being peddled by the children.[20]

[edit]

Civil rights cases

[edit]

Early civil rights career

[edit]

Phelps earned a law degree from Washburn University in 1964, and founded the Phelps Chartered law firm.[23] However, in 1969, upon a finding of professional misconduct, authorities suspended him from practicing as a lawyer for two years.[2]

Phelps' second notable cases were related to civil rights, and his involvement in civil rights cases in and around Kansas gained him praise from local African-American leaders.[2]

"I systematically brought down the Jim Crow laws of this town", he claimed.[9] Phelps' daughter Shirley Phelps-Roper was quoted as saying, "We took on the Jim Crow establishment, and Kansas did not take that sitting down. They used to shoot our car windows out, screaming we were nigger lovers." She added that the Phelps law firm made up one-third of the state's federal docket of civil rights cases.[24]

Phelps took cases on behalf of African-American clients alleging racial discrimination by school systems, and a predominantly black American Legion post which had been raided by police, alleging racially based police abuse.[25] Phelps' law firm obtained settlements for some clients.[26]

Johnson v. Topeka Board of Education, et. al.

[edit]

Phelps' national notoriety first came from a 1973 lawsuit (settled in 1978) on behalf of a 10-year-old African-American plaintiff, Evelyn Renee Johnson (some sources say Evelyn Rene Johnson), against the Topeka Board of Education (which had, in 1954, famously lost the pivotal racial discrimination case of Brown v. Board of Education, ending legal racial segregation in U.S. public schools), and against related local, state and federal officials. In the 1973 case, Phelps argued that the Topeka Board of Education, in violation of the 1954 ruling, had not yet made its schools equal, and by attending Topeka's east-side, predominantly minority schools, the black plaintiff had received an inferior education.[2][27][28]

Initially, Phelps attempted to file the case as a class action, in the U.S. District Court for Kansas. Asking the court to order an end to the alleged discrimination and suggesting that busing might be at least one remedy, Phelps also sought $100 million in actual damages, plus another $100 million in punitive damages—or, alternatively, $20,000 for each of the 10,000 students he claimed were in the aggrieved class of victims.[2][27] Nevertheless, the federal district and appellate courts denied the class action filing, limiting the case to Phelps's initial plaintiff, Evelyn Johnson, alone.[29]

The case fueled a national debate about racial integration of schools,[30] and prompted the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, by 1974, to order the Topeka board to develop corrective remedies.[28]

Topeka's school board did not contest the charges. On the guidance of its insurance provider, it settled the litigation (with no admission of wrongdoing) for $19,500—$12,400 of which went to Phelps. While the settlement drew some praise, controversy arose when the judge ordered the settlement amount sealed at the request of the insurer—apparently with Phelps's approval. (Details leaked out to the media anyway.) Phelps announced he would file more such cases, as class actions, but the insurance company stated it would not pay for any more of them.[2][27][29][31]

Later civil rights career

[edit]

In 1986, Phelps sued President Ronald Reagan over Reagan's appointment of a U.S. ambassador to the Vatican, alleging this violated separation of church and state. The case was dismissed by the U.S. district court.[26][32]

Phelps' law firm, staffed by himself and family members, also represented non-white Kansans in discrimination actions against Kansas City Power and Light, Southwestern Bell, and the Topeka City Attorney, and represented two female professors alleging discrimination at Kansas universities.[24]

A defeat in his civil rights suit against the City of Wichita and others, on behalf of Jesse O. Rice (the fired executive director of the Wichita Civil Rights Equal Employment Opportunity Commission), among other causes, would lead to further legal actions ending in Phelps' disbarment and censure.[clarification needed][33][34]

In the 1980s, Phelps received awards from the Greater Kansas City Chapter of Blacks in Government and the Bonner Springs branch of the NAACP, for his work on behalf of black clients.[2][26]

One of his sons, Nate, stated that Phelps largely took civil rights cases for money rather than principle. Nate said that his father "held racist attitudes" and he would use slurs against black clients: "They would come into his office and after they left, he would talk about how stupid they were and call them dumb niggers." Nate's sister, Shirley, denies his account and states their father never used racist language.[35]

Disbarment

[edit]

A formal complaint was filed against Phelps on November 8, 1977, by the Kansas State Board of Law Examiners, due to his conduct during a lawsuit, against a court reporter named Carolene Brady, who had failed to have a court transcript ready for Phelps on the day he asked for it. Although it did not affect the outcome of the case, Phelps sued her for $22,000.[36][37]

In the ensuing trial, Phelps called Brady to the stand, declared her a hostile witness, and then cross-examined her for nearly a week, during which he accused her of being a "slut", tried to introduce testimony from former boyfriends whom Phelps wanted to subpoena, and accused her of a variety of perverse sexual acts, ultimately reducing her to tears on the stand.[36][37]

Phelps lost the case. According to the Kansas Supreme Court:

The trial became an exhibition of a personal vendetta by Phelps against Carolene Brady. His examination was replete with repetition, badgering, innuendo, belligerence, irrelevant and immaterial matter, evidencing only a desire to hurt and destroy the defendant. The jury verdict didn't stop the onslaught of Phelps. He was not satisfied with the hurt, pain, and damage he had visited on Carolene Brady.[36][37]

In an appeal, Phelps prepared affidavits swearing to the court that he had eight witnesses whose testimony would convince the court to rule in his favor. Brady obtained sworn, signed affidavits from those eight people in question, all of whom said that Phelps had never contacted them and that they had no reason to testify against Brady.[36][37]

Phelps was found to have made "false statements in violation of DR 7–102(A)(5)". On July 20, 1979, Phelps was permanently disbarred from practicing law in the state of Kansas, although he continued to practice in federal courts.[36][37][33][34]

In 1985, nine Federal judges filed a disciplinary complaint against Phelps and five of his children, alleging false accusations against the judges. In 1989, the complaint was settled; Phelps agreed to stop practicing law in Federal court permanently, and two of his children were suspended for a period of six months and one year, respectively.[33][34][20][2]

Family life

[edit]

Phelps married Margie M. Simms in May 1952, a year after the couple met at the Arizona Bible Institute. They had 13 children, 54 grandchildren, and 7 great-grandchildren.[38]

Nathan Phelps, Fred Phelps' estranged son, claims that the elder Phelps was an abusive father, that he (Nate) never had a relationship with him when he was growing up, and that the Westboro Baptist Church is an organization for his father to "vent his rage and anger."[39] He alleges that, in addition to hurting others, his father used to physically abuse his wife and children by beating them with his fists and with the handle of a mattock to the point of bleeding.[39][40] Phelps' brother, Mark, has supported and repeated Nathan's claims of physical abuse by their father.[41] Since 2004, over 20 members of the church, mostly family members, have left the church.[42]

Religious beliefs

[edit]
Advertisement for opening service of Westboro Baptist Church, Topeka Capital, 1955

Phelps described himself as an Old School Baptist, and stated that he held to all five points of Calvinism.[43] Phelps particularly highlighted John Calvin's doctrine of unconditional election, the belief that God has elected certain people for salvation before birth, and limited atonement, the belief that Christ only died for the elect, and condemns those who believe otherwise.[44] Despite claiming to be an Old School Baptist, he was ordained by a Southern Baptist church, and was rejected and generally condemned by Old School (or Primitive) Baptists.[45]

Phelps viewed Arminianism (particularly the views of the Methodist theologian William Elbert Munsey) as a "worse blasphemy and heresy than that heard in all filthy Saturday night fag bars in the aggregate in the world".[46]

In addition to John Calvin, Phelps admired Martin Luther and Bob Jones Sr., and approvingly quoted a statement by Jones that "what this country needs is 50 Jonathan Edwardses turned loose in it."[47] Phelps particularly held to equal ultimacy, believing that "God Almighty makes some willing and he leads others into sin", a view he said is Calvinist.[48]

Phelps opposed such common Baptist practices as Sunday school meetings, Bible colleges and seminaries, and multi-denominational crusades.[49] Although he attended Bob Jones University, and worked with Billy Graham in his Los Angeles Crusade before Graham changed his views on a literal Hell and salvation, Phelps considered Graham the greatest false prophet since Balaam. He also condemned large church leaders, such as Robert Schuller and Jerry Falwell, as well as all Catholics.[50]

Church protest activities

[edit]
Phelps at his pulpit

All of Phelps' demonstrations and other activities during the last 50 years of his life were conducted in conjunction with the congregation of Westboro Baptist Church (WBC), an American unaffiliated Baptist church known for its extreme ideologies, especially those against gay people.[51][52] The church is widely described as a hate group[53] and is monitored as such by the Anti-Defamation League and Southern Poverty Law Center. It was headed by Phelps until his later years when he took a reduced role in the activities of the church and his family.[42] In March 2014, church representatives said that the church had not had a defined leader in "a very long time,"[54] and church members consist primarily of his large family;[2][55] in 2011, the church stated that it had about 40 members.[56] The church is headquartered in a residential neighborhood on the west side of Topeka about three miles (5 km) west of the Kansas State Capitol. Its first public service was held on the afternoon of November 27, 1955.[57]

The church has been involved in actions against gay people since at least 1991, when it sought a crackdown on homosexual activity at Gage Park six blocks northwest of the church.[2][58] In 2001, Phelps estimated that the WBC had held 40 pickets a week for the previous 10 years.[59] In addition to conducting anti-gay protests at military funerals, the organization pickets other celebrity funerals and public events that are likely to gain media attention.[2][60] Protests have also been held against Jews,[61] and some protests have included WBC members stomping on the American flag.[62]

Lawsuit against Westboro Baptist Church

[edit]

On March 10, 2006, WBC picketed the funeral of Marine Lance Corporal Matthew A. Snyder, who died in combat in Iraq on March 3, 2006.[63][2] The Snyder family sued Fred Phelps for defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.[64][2]

On October 31, 2007, WBC, Fred Phelps and his two daughters, Shirley Phelps-Roper and Rebekah Phelps-Davis, were found liable for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress. A federal jury awarded Snyder's father $2.9 million in compensatory damages, then later added a decision to award $6 million in punitive damages for invasion of privacy and an additional $2 million for causing emotional distress (a total of $10.9 million).[65][2]

The lawsuit named Albert Snyder, father of Matthew Snyder, as the plaintiff, and Fred W. Phelps Sr., Westboro Baptist Church, Inc., Rebekah Phelps-Davis, and Shirley Phelps-Roper as defendants, alleging that they were responsible for publishing defamatory information about the Snyder family on the Internet, including statements that Albert and his wife had "raised [Matthew] for the devil" and taught him "to defy his Creator, to divorce, and to commit adultery". Other statements denounced them for raising their son Catholic. Snyder further complained the defendants had intruded upon and staged protests at his son's funeral. The claims of invasion of privacy and defamation arising from comments posted about Snyder on the Westboro website were dismissed on First Amendment grounds, but the case proceeded to trial on the remaining three counts.[66]

Albert Snyder, the father of LCpl Matthew A. Snyder, testified:

They turned this funeral into a media circus and they wanted to hurt my family. They wanted their message heard and they didn't care who they stepped over. My son should have been buried with dignity, not with a bunch of clowns outside.[67]

In his instructions to the jury, U.S. District Judge Richard D. Bennett stated that the First Amendment protection of free speech has limits, including vulgar, offensive and shocking statements, and that the jury must decide "whether the defendant's actions would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, whether they were extreme and outrageous and whether these actions were so offensive and shocking as to not be entitled to First Amendment protection". (see also Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, a case in which certain personal slurs and obscene utterances by an individual were found unworthy of First Amendment protection, due to the potential for violence resulting from their utterance). WBC sought a mistrial based on alleged prejudicial statements made by the judge and violations of the gag order by the plaintiff's attorney. An appeal was also sought by the WBC. On February 4, 2008, Bennett upheld the ruling but reduced the punitive damages from $8 million to $2.1 million. The total judgment then stood at $5 million. Court liens were ordered on church buildings and Phelps' law office in an attempt to ensure that the damages were paid.[68]

An appeal by WBC was heard on September 24, 2009. The federal appeals court ruled in favor of Phelps and Westboro Baptist Church, stating that their picket near the funeral of LCpl Matthew A. Snyder is protected speech and did not violate the privacy of the service member's family, reversing the lower court's $5 million judgment. On March 30, 2010, the federal appeals court ordered Albert Snyder to pay the court costs for the Westboro Baptist Church, an amount totaling $16,510.[69] Political commentator Bill O'Reilly agreed on March 30 to cover the costs, pending appeal.[70]

A writ of certiorari was granted on an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, and the oral argument for the case took place on October 6, 2010. Margie Phelps, one of Fred Phelps' children, represented the Westboro Baptist Church.[71]

The Court ruled in favor of Phelps in an 8–1 decision, holding that the protesters' speech related to a public issue, and was disseminated on a public sidewalk. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote, for the majority, "As a nation we have chosen ... to protect even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate." Justice Samuel Alito, the lone dissenter, wrote, "Our profound national commitment to free and open debate is not a license for the vicious verbal assault that occurred in this case."[72]

Efforts to discourage funeral protests

[edit]

On May 24, 2006, the United States House and Senate passed the Respect for America's Fallen Heroes Act, which President George W. Bush signed five days later. The act bans protests within 300 feet (91 m) of national cemeteries – which numbered 122 when the bill was signed – from an hour before a funeral to an hour after it. Violators face up to a $100,000 fine and up to a year in prison.[4][2]

On August 6, 2012, President Obama signed Pub. L. 112–154 (text) (PDF), the Honoring America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 which, among other things, requires a 300-foot (91 m) and 2-hour buffer zone around military funerals.[7]

As of April 2006, nine states had passed laws regarding protests near funeral sites immediately before and after ceremonies:

States that are considering laws are:

Florida increased the penalty for disturbing military funerals, amending a previous ban on the disruption of lawful assembly.[81]

On January 11, 2011, Arizona passed an emergency measure which prohibits protests within 300 feet (91 m) of any funeral services, in response to an announcement by the WBC that it planned to protest at 2011 Tucson shooting victim Christina Green's funeral.[82]

These bans have been contested. Bart McQueary, having protested with Phelps on at least three occasions,[83] filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the constitutionality of Kentucky's funeral protest ban. On September 26, 2006, a district court agreed and entered an injunction prohibiting the ban from being enforced.[83] In the opinion, the judge wrote:

Sections 5(1)(b) and (c) restrict substantially more speech than that which would interfere with a funeral or that which would be so obtrusive that funeral participants could not avoid it. Accordingly, the provisions are not narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest but are instead unconstitutionally overbroad.[84]

The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit in Missouri on behalf of Phelps and Westboro Baptist Church to overturn the ban on the picketing of soldier's funerals.[85] The ACLU of Ohio also filed a similar lawsuit.[citation needed]

In the case of Snyder v. Phelps, the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that "distasteful and repugnant" protests surrounding funerals of service members were protected by the First Amendment. But attorneys for the service member's family appealed the decision on the grounds that such speech should not be allowed to inflict emotional distress on private parties exercising their freedom of religion during a funeral service. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case on October 6, 2010, and ruled 8–1 in favor of Phelps in an opinion released on March 2, 2011.[72][2] The court held that "any distress occasioned by Westboro's picketing turned on the content and viewpoint of the message conveyed, rather than any interference with the funeral itself" and thus could not be restricted.[72][86][87][88]

People targeted by Phelps

[edit]
Phelps picketing outside the Kansas State Capitol

Beginning in the early 1990s, Phelps targeted numerous individuals and groups in the public eye for criticism by the Westboro Baptist Church.

Prominent examples include President Ronald Reagan, Princess Diana, Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, National Football League star Reggie White, Sonny Bono, comedian George Carlin, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, atheists, Muslims, murdered college student Matthew Shepard, children's television host Fred Rogers, American televangelist Tammy Faye Bakker,[89] Australian actor Heath Ledger, Comedy Central's Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, political commentator Bill O'Reilly, filmmaker Richard Rossi, film critic Roger Ebert,[90] Catholics, Australians,[91] Swedes, the Irish, and US soldiers killed in Iraq. He also targeted the Joseph Estabrook Elementary School in Lexington, Massachusetts, center of the David Parker controversy.

Phelps also picketed memorials to victims of different mass shootings, including the spreading of unfounded theories, such as saying that Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, the perpetrators of the 1999 Columbine High School massacre, were gay, saying that "Two filthy fags slaughtered 13 people at Columbine High."[92][93]

In 2006, in the aftermath of the West Nickel Mines School shooting, where five Amish girls were murdered, Phelps mocked the shooting, saying that it had been caused by Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell's criticism of Westboro.[94] Phelps further planned a protest at the funeral for the five girls murdered, but called it off, opting to spread their messages on a local radio station instead.[95]

Phelps continued picketing funerals and memorials for victims of mass shootings during the late 2000s, including the plan to picket the memorial for two victims of the Northern Illinois University shooting in 2008, which was countered by a preacher who hosted a seminar against Phelps' views.[96] After Phelps announced plans, as aforementioned, to picket the funeral of the youngest victim of the 2011 Tucson shooting on Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, Phelps responded to the emergency legislation which banned him from doing so, by praising the shooter, Jared Lee Loughner, saying: "Thank God for the violent shooter", and labeled Loughner as a "hero".[97] In 2007, he stated that he would target Jerry Falwell's funeral.[98]

Phelps' daughter, Shirley Phelps-Roper, has appeared on Fox News Channel, defending the WBC and attacking homosexuality. She and her children have also appeared on the Howard Stern radio show attempting to promote their agenda and church. Phelps' followers have repeatedly protested the University of Kansas School of Law's graduation ceremonies.

In August 2007, in the wake of the Minneapolis I-35W bridge collapse, Phelps and his congregation stated that they would protest at the funerals of the victims. In a statement, the church said that Minneapolis is the "land of the Sodomite damned".[99]

Political activities

[edit]

Anti-gay

[edit]

In the movie Hatemongers, members of the Westboro Baptist Church state their children were being "accosted" by homosexuals in Gage Park, about a 12 mile (800 m) from the Phelps' home and a mile (1.6 km) northwest of Westboro Baptist Church. Shirley Phelps-Roper says that, in the late 1980s, Fred Phelps claimed to have witnessed a homosexual attempting to lure her then five-year-old son Joshua into some shrubbery. After several complaints to the local government about the large amount of homosexual sex occurring in the park, with no resulting action, the Phelpses put up signs warning of homosexual activity. This resulted in much negative attention for the family. When the Phelpses called on local churches to speak against the activity in Gage Park, the churches also lashed out against the Phelps family, leading to the family protesting homosexuality on a regular basis.[24][2]

In 2005, Phelps and his family, along with several other local congregations, held a signature drive to bring about a vote to repeal two city ordinances that added sexual orientation to a definition of hate crimes and banned the city itself from workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation. Enough signatures were collected to bring the measure to a vote.[100] Topeka voters defeated the repeal measure on March 1, 2005, by a 53–47% margin. In the same election, Phelps' granddaughter Jael was an unsuccessful candidate for the Topeka City Council, seeking to replace Tiffany Muller, the first openly gay member of the council.[101]

Electoral politics

[edit]
Phelps speaking at a picket at the 2004 Democratic National Convention

Phelps ran in Kansas Democratic Party primaries five times, but never won. These included races for governor in 1990, 1994, and 1998, receiving about 15 percent of the vote in 1998.[102] In the 1992 Democratic Party primary for U.S. Senate, Phelps received 31 percent of the vote.[103] Phelps ran for mayor of Topeka in 1993[104][105] and 1997.[citation needed]

Phelps supported Al Gore in the 1988 Democratic Party presidential primary election. In his 1984 Senate race, Gore had opposed a "gay bill of rights" and stated that homosexuality was not something that "society should affirm", a position Gore had publicly changed by 2000 as his official position. Phelps stated that he supported Gore because of these earlier comments.[106]

In 1996 Phelps opposed Clinton's (and Gore's) re-election because of the administration's support for gay rights; the Westboro congregation picketed a 1997 inaugural ball.[107]

Saddam Hussein

[edit]

In 1997, Phelps wrote a letter to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, praising his regime for being "the only Muslim state that allows the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ to be freely and openly preached on the streets".[108]

Arrests and traveling restrictions

[edit]

United States

[edit]

In 1994, Phelps was convicted of disorderly conduct for verbal harassment, and received two suspended 30-day jail sentences.[20][104]

Phelps' 1995 conviction for assault and battery carried a five-year prison sentence, with a mandatory 18 months to be served before he became eligible for parole. Phelps fought to be allowed to remain free until his appeals process went through. Days away from being arrested and sent to prison, a judge ruled that Phelps had been denied a speedy trial and that he was not required to serve any time.[20][104]

Canada

[edit]

In August 2008, Canadian officials learned of WBC's intent to stage a protest at the funeral of Tim McLean, a Winnipeg resident who was killed on a bus. The protests intended to convey the message that the man's murder was God's response to Canadian laws permitting abortion, homosexuality, divorce and remarriage. In response, Canadian officials barred the organization's members from entering the country.[109]

United Kingdom

[edit]

On February 18, 2009, two days before the Westboro Baptist Church's first UK picket, the United Kingdom Home Office announced that Fred Phelps and Shirley Phelps-Roper would be refused entry and that "other church members could also be flagged and stopped if they tried to enter Britain".[110] In May 2009, he and his daughter Shirley were placed on the Home Office's "name and shame" list of people barred from entering the UK for "fostering hatred which might lead to inter-community violence".[111]

In the media

[edit]

In 1993, Phelps appeared on a first-season episode of the talk show Ricki Lake, alleging that homosexuals and "anyone who carries the AIDS virus" deserved to die. When Phelps and his son-in-law Charles Hockenbarger (married to Phelps' daughter Rachel) became increasingly belligerent, Lake ordered the Phelps family to leave the studio. During a commercial break, the two were forced off the set and escorted out of the building by security.[112] After Phelps died, Lake tweeted that when he had been on the show, he had told her that she worshipped her own rectum — a remark that led her to take action off-stage to have Phelps removed from the set.[113]

The Phelps family was the subject of the 2007 TV program The Most Hated Family in America, presented on the BBC by Louis Theroux.[114] Four years after his original documentary, Theroux produced a follow-up program America's Most Hated Family in Crisis, which was prompted by news of family members leaving the church.[115] Phelps' son Nate has broken ranks with the family and in an interview with Peter W. Klein on the Canadian program The Standard, he characterized his father as abusive and warned the Phelps family could turn violent.[116] Writing in response to Phelps' death in 2014, Theroux described Phelps as "an angry bigot who thrived on conflict", and expressed the view that his death would not lead to any "huge changes" in the church, as he saw it as operating with the dynamics of a large family rather than a cult.[117] Theroux returned for a third documentary in 2019, titled Surviving America's Most Hated Family.[118]

Kevin Smith produced a horror film titled Red State featuring a religious fundamentalist villain inspired by Phelps.[119][120]

Phelps appeared in A Union in Wait, a 2001 Sundance Channel documentary film about same-sex marriage, directed by Ryan Butler after Phelps picketed Wake Forest Baptist Church at Wake Forest University over a proposed same-sex union ceremony.

Excommunication and death

[edit]

Fred Phelps preached his final Sunday sermon on September 1, 2013. Five weeks later, sermons resumed from various members.[121][122]

On March 15, 2014, Nathan Phelps, Phelps' estranged son, reported that Phelps was in very poor health and was receiving hospice care.[123] He said that Phelps had been excommunicated from the church in August 2013, and then moved into a house where he "basically stopped eating and drinking".[123][124][125] His statements were supported by his brother, Mark. Church spokesman Steve Drain declined to answer questions about Phelps' excommunication, and denied that the church had a single leader.[126] The church's official website said that membership status is private and did not confirm or deny the excommunication.[127]

Phelps died of natural causes shortly before midnight on March 19, 2014, at the age of 84.[128][129][130] His daughter, Shirley, stated that a funeral for her father would not be held because the church does not "worship the dead".[130] According to Nathan Phelps, Fred Phelps' body was immediately cremated,[131] and according to his granddaughter Megan Phelps-Roper, Phelps' cremated remains were buried in an unmarked grave in Kansas.[132]

Phelps had been reportedly suffering from some form of dementia in his final year, and started behaving irrationally. This led to church members believing that God had condemned him.[133] It has been stated that Phelps "had a softening of heart at the end of his life,"[134] according to accounts published in a memoir written by Phelps' granddaughter Megan Phelps-Roper, and reporting from The New Yorker citing former members of the church.[135] This includes an incident in 2013, in which Phelps is said to have stepped outside the church and called over to members of Planting Peace, a nonprofit that bought a house on the other street and painted it with an LGBT rainbow, saying: "You're good people!"[136] In an interview with NPR, Megan Phelps-Roper said this outburst was "the proximate cause" of Phelps being excommunicated,[137] a claim that the church has denied.[138] According to Phelps' grandson and former church member Zach Phelps-Roper, Phelps' actions were regarded as "rank blasphemy" by the church members.[139][140]

Electoral history

[edit]

Democratic primary for Governor of Kansas, 1990

Democratic primary for United States Senate, Kansas 1992

  • Gloria O'Dell: 111,015 (69.20%)
  • Fred Phelps: 49,416 (30.80%)

Democratic primary for Governor of Kansas, 1994

Democratic primary for Governor of Kansas, 1998

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  138. ^ Mangan, Lucy (July 14, 2019). "Louis Theroux: Surviving America's Most Hated Family review – a deeply uncomfortable watch". The Guardian. Retrieved March 3, 2020. On the other hand, Theroux hears a persistent rumour that Gramps died excommunicated after shouting "You're good people" at the gay rights charity HQ across the street. Did dementia strip him down to a better man at the core? Was it a moment of simple madness that meant nothing? Or was it, of course, demonic possession? It seems clear, however, that something has shaken members. Is the gentler preaching a sign that cracks in the certainties upon which Gramps's church was built are starting to appear? No one is willing to admit the event even happened.
  139. ^ Sieczkowski, Cavan (May 23, 2014). "Fred Phelps May Have Had A Change Of Heart Toward Gays, Relative Says" – via Huff Post.
  140. ^ "Equality House". www.facebook.com.
  141. ^ See "Fred Phelps". September 2, 2012. Retrieved December 12, 2012. for all election statistics
[edit]
For external links related to Westboro Baptist Church and not Phelps specifically, see this section.
Biographical information