Westboro member files suit in Neb.

? A Kansas woman accused of violating Nebraska’s flag desecration law two years ago filed a lawsuit Wednesday against more than a dozen officials, including the state’s governor and attorney general, whom she alleges are trampling on her rights.

The lawsuit filed on Shirley Phelps-Roper’s behalf in U.S. District Court in Lincoln argues that Nebraska’s flag law and another state law that restricts protests at funeral sites should be declared unconstitutional and barred from being enforced.

Phelps-Roper is a member of Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan., known for protesting at military funerals to express the belief that U.S. troop deaths are punishment for the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality. She alleges that officials are misusing their powers and applying the laws inconsistently, discriminatorily and in violation of her and her fellow church members’ right to free speech.

“These steps that we’re taking are necessary because that federal court, called the last refuge of the oppressed, is either going to do right or they’re going to bring more thunder on your state and on the nation,” she said Wednesday.

Church members planned to hold several protests Wednesday in Lincoln, Omaha, Bellevue and Papillion outside the state Capitol and offices of other officials named in the lawsuit. That list includes Gov. Dave Heineman, Attorney General Jon Bruning and several law enforcement officials and prosecutors in eastern Nebraska.

Bruning’s office wasn’t certain whether attorneys for the state had seen the lawsuit yet and couldn’t immediately comment.

Nebraska’s law against flag desecration bars intentionally “casting contempt or ridicule” upon a U.S. or Nebraska flag by mutilating, defacing, defiling, burning or trampling it. State law also prohibits picketing within 300 feet of a funeral or memorial services. The law applies one hour before services begin and two hours after they conclude. Violators of either law face a misdemeanor charge.

According to the lawsuit, church members have been involved in more than 40,000 protests across the country in nearly 20 years. That includes about 250 to 300 protests in connection with funerals and memorial services. Church members say all have been conducted peacefully and lawfully. The group began protesting at military funerals in 2005 — a year before Nebraska’s picketing law was adopted.