(Reuters) - A group of Chicago-area nuns is suing a strip club behind their
convent, complaining of noise, glaring neon lights, fist fights and heaps of
litter that include empty whiskey bottles and used condoms.
The Missionary Sisters of St. Charles Borromeo said Illinois mandates a
1,000-foot (300-meter) buffer zone between adult entertainment venues and places
of worship or schools. The suit, filed on Friday in Cook County, also names the
village of Stone Park, where the strip club is located.
The $3 million Club Allure opened last September across the back fence of the
convent, which has three chapels, a home for retired sisters, and a house for
young women thinking about becoming nuns, the nuns' lawyers said.
"The Sisters have every right to pray and work peacefully without disruption
from a strip club in their backyard," Peter Breen, the lawyer for the nuns, said
in a statement.
A representative for the club was not immediately available for comment.
Stone Park attorney Dean Krone said on Tuesday that the 1,000-foot limit
applies to most of the state, but a one-mile (1.6 km) restriction applies to
suburban Cook County, which includes Stone Park.
He said the Cook County limit is unconstitutional because it would prohibit
any kind of strip club in the small towns in the county, which would violate
free speech protections.
(Reporting by Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Eric Beech)






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