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"It sounded like it was getting a little strange," Dison said. "I think everyone thinks it has crossed the line." "If I'm a gay person living in Michigan, this does not instill confidence that the attorney general's office has my best interests at heart," he added. "It's surprising that you would keep an employee who would damage the credibility of the work that you're trying to do in the state." Armstrong has applied in Ann Arbor for a personal protection order, Cox spokesman John Sellek said Friday. A hearing is scheduled for Monday. Armstrong didn't respond Thursday to e-mail and phone messages. He has publicly said little about Shirvell or the blog. During a student assembly meeting Monday, he said he wouldn't "succumb to any unwarranted attacks," according to The Michigan Daily newspaper. Shirvell was an intern with the attorney general's office in 2003 and 2004, before being hired full-time after graduating in 2006 from the Ann Arbor campus of Ave Maria School of Law, a Catholic institution that moved to Florida last year. He worked as a scheduler for several months during Cox's 2006 re-election bid, and now deals with criminal appeals. Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm -- the former attorney general -- said on her Facebook page Thursday that, "If I was still Attorney General and Andrew Shirvell worked for me, he would have already been fired." But Kary Moss, executive director of the Michigan chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, said Shirvell's free speech rights deserve to be protected, although she commended Cox for distancing himself from his comments. "As offensive and as despicable as Mr. Shirvell's comments are, they are protected expression under the First Amendment when they are not used as a direct threat," she said. "Without making specific threats against others, this is just another example of speech that society must tolerate, even though it is profoundly disturbing and stirs many to anger." If Shirvell is found to have taken actions such as criminal harassment and stalking, however, "law enforcement can and should get involved," she added.
[Associated
Press;
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