Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, April 30, 2018
Certiorari Denied In Christian School's RLUIPA Lawsuit
The U.S. Supreme Court today denied review in Livingston Christian Schools v. Genoa Charter Township, (Docket No. 17-914, certiorari denied 4/30/2018) (Order List). In the case, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed a RLUIPA claim by a Christian school that was denied a special use permit needed for it to relocate. The school had concluded that remaining in its present location on a long-term basis would end in its dissolution from lack of enrollment and income. However the Court held as a matter of law that the denial of the permit did not impose a "substantial burden" on the school. (See prior posting.)
Labels:
Christian,
RLUIPA,
US Supreme Court
British Court Gives Coroners Guide On Prioritizing Release of Bodies For Religious Reasons
In Adath Yisroel Burial Society v. HM Senior Coroner For Inner North London, (EWHC, April 27, 2018), a 2-judge panel in England's High Court held unlawful the policy of a London Coroner to categorically refuse to give priority to releasing a body for burial when requested to do so for religious reasons. Jewish and Muslim religious law calls for burial to take place quickly after death. The court summarized its holding in part as follows:
(1) A Coroner cannot lawfully exclude religious reasons for seeking expedition of decisions by that Coroner, including the Coroner’s decision whether to release a body for burial.
(2) A Coroner is entitled to prioritise cases, for religious or other reasons, even where the consequence of prioritising one or some cases may be that other cases will have to wait longer for a decision....
(3) Whether to accord one case priority over another or others is for the Coroner to determine. The following further points apply:
a) It is in principle acceptable for the Coroner to implement a policy to address the circumstances when priority will or may be given, so long as that policy is flexible and enables all relevant considerations to be taken into account.
b) The availability of resources may be a relevant consideration in drawing up that policy or in making the decision in any individual case but limitations on resources do not justify discrimination.
(4) It would be wrong for a Coroner to impose a rule of automatic priority for cases where there are religious reasons for seeking expedition.JTA reports on the decision. [Thanks to Steven H. Sholk for the lead.]
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
- Ryan T. Anderson, A New Time for Choosing on Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness: Today's Challenges to the Principles of Ronald Reagan's Conservative Manifesto, (The Reagan Manifesto: “A Time for Choosing” and its Influence, edited by Eric D. Patterson and Jeffry H. Morrison. Palgrave Macmillan (2016)).
- Angela Carmella, When Businesses Refuse to Serve for Religious Reasons: Drawing Lines between 'Participation' and 'Endorsement' in Claims of Moral Complicity, (Rutgers Law Review, Vol. 69, 2018).
- Tarunabh Khaitan & Jane Calderwood Norton, The Place of Religion in Human Rights Law: Distinguishing Freedom of Religion from the Right Against Religious Discrimination, (April 13, 2018).
- Peter J. Hill, The Ideological Origins of the Rule of Law, (Presented at The Life and Legacy of Douglass North Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of North’s Nobel Prize in Economics, March 2018).
- Kate Elengold, Consumer Remedies for Civil Rights, (Boston University Law Review, Forthcoming).
- Guy Pessach & Michal Shur-Ofry, Copyright and the Holocaust, (Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, Forthcoming).
From SSRN (Non-U.S. Law):
- Ivo Telec, Spiritual Healing As a Religious Act. Czech Legal View, (April 4, 2018).
- Myriam Hunter-Henin, English Schools with a Religious Ethos: For a Re-Interpretation of Religious Autonomy, (Religion and Human Rights, Forthcoming).
- Richard Moon, Conscientious Objection in Canada: Pragmatic Accommodation and Principled Adjudication, (Oxford Journal of Law and Religion, Forthcoming).
- Md. Jahirul Islam, Masahiro Suzuki, Nurunnahar Mazumder & Nada Ibrahim, Challenges of Implementing Restorative Justice for Intimate Partner Violence: An Islamic Perspective, (Journal of Religion & Spirituality in Social Work, Forthcoming).
From SmartCILP:
- Mark A. Goldfeder, Michelle K. Terry, To Repeal or Not Repeal: The Johnson Amendment, 48 University of Memphis Law Review 209-255 (2017).
Labels:
Articles of interest
Sunday, April 29, 2018
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Howard v. Skolnik, (9th Cir., April 23, 2018), the 9th Circuit upheld a prison's cancellation of Nation of Islam services for security reasons.
In Wallace v. Ducart, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66371 (ND CA, April 19, 2018), a California federal district court held that an inmate could move ahead with an equal protection claim alleging that he was fired from his prison job because of his religion.
In McDougald v. Davis, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66626 (SD OH, April 20, 2018), an Ohio federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a Jewish inmate' complaint that he was initially denied kosher meals.
In Ealom v. United States, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66792 (D KA, April 20, 2018), a Kansas federal district court held that a female Muslim inmate who claimed that she has been harassed about her religious headgear and once was not allowed to go receive medication until she removed it did not adequately allege free exercise of 8th Amendment claims.
In Rose v. Annucci, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67017 (ND NY, April 19, 2018), a New York federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing claims by a Muslim inmate that he was not permitted to participate in Eid-Ul-Adha and Ramadan. Plaintiff, among other things, refused or failed to comply with required paperwork.
In Hill v. Smith, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67019 (ND NY, April 19, 2018), a New York federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a formerly-Protestant but now Muslim inmate's complaint that he was told to take off his Kufi. Apparently authorities were concerned that its color indicated gang affiliation.
In Snowden v. Prince George's County Department of Corrections, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68419 (D MD, April 23, 2018), a Maryland federal district court denied a default judgment to Muslim inmates complaining that they were prevented from having Friday religious services and daily congregational prayers.
In Cary v. Crooms, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69377 (ED MI, April 25, 2018), a Michigan federal district court allowed a Native American inmate to move ahead with his complaint over the way his medicine bag and herbs were treated during a cell search.
In Clark v. United States, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69527 (ED KY, April 24, 2018), a Kentucky federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that a correctional officer made derisive comments about his being a Moorish-American Muslim.
In Irsan v. Gonzalez, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70204 (SD TX, April 26, 2018), a Texas federal district court dismissed a Muslim inmate's complaint that during Ramadan he was offered only peanut butter sandwiches instead of hot Halal meals, and his charge that items he used for religious purposes were confiscated from his cell in retaliation for his Muslim beliefs.
In Wallace v. Ducart, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66371 (ND CA, April 19, 2018), a California federal district court held that an inmate could move ahead with an equal protection claim alleging that he was fired from his prison job because of his religion.
In McDougald v. Davis, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66626 (SD OH, April 20, 2018), an Ohio federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a Jewish inmate' complaint that he was initially denied kosher meals.
In Ealom v. United States, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66792 (D KA, April 20, 2018), a Kansas federal district court held that a female Muslim inmate who claimed that she has been harassed about her religious headgear and once was not allowed to go receive medication until she removed it did not adequately allege free exercise of 8th Amendment claims.
In Rose v. Annucci, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67017 (ND NY, April 19, 2018), a New York federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing claims by a Muslim inmate that he was not permitted to participate in Eid-Ul-Adha and Ramadan. Plaintiff, among other things, refused or failed to comply with required paperwork.
In Hill v. Smith, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67019 (ND NY, April 19, 2018), a New York federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a formerly-Protestant but now Muslim inmate's complaint that he was told to take off his Kufi. Apparently authorities were concerned that its color indicated gang affiliation.
In Snowden v. Prince George's County Department of Corrections, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68419 (D MD, April 23, 2018), a Maryland federal district court denied a default judgment to Muslim inmates complaining that they were prevented from having Friday religious services and daily congregational prayers.
In Cary v. Crooms, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69377 (ED MI, April 25, 2018), a Michigan federal district court allowed a Native American inmate to move ahead with his complaint over the way his medicine bag and herbs were treated during a cell search.
In Clark v. United States, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69527 (ED KY, April 24, 2018), a Kentucky federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that a correctional officer made derisive comments about his being a Moorish-American Muslim.
In Irsan v. Gonzalez, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70204 (SD TX, April 26, 2018), a Texas federal district court dismissed a Muslim inmate's complaint that during Ramadan he was offered only peanut butter sandwiches instead of hot Halal meals, and his charge that items he used for religious purposes were confiscated from his cell in retaliation for his Muslim beliefs.
Labels:
Prisoner cases
Jury Awards $5.1M In EEOC Suit For Religious Coercion of Employees
According to an EEOC press release, after a 3-week trial in federal district court in New York, a jury awarded $5.1 million in compensatory and punitive damages against United Health Programs of America, Inc. and its parent company for coercing ten employees to engage in religious practices, creating a hostile work environment for nine of them, and firing one employee for opposing these practices. The EEOC, which filed suit on behalf of the employees, reports:
CCG employees were forced to engage in a variety of religious practices at work, including prayer, religious workshops, and spiritual cleansing rituals. These practices were part of a belief system called "Harnessing Happiness" or "Onionhead," created by the aunt of CCG's CEO's. The judge previously ruled such practices constituted a religion, for purposes of Title VII. The aunt, employed by CCG as a consultant and fully supported by CCG's upper management, spent substantial time in the company's offices from 2007, implemented the religious activities at the workplace and had a role in employee hiring and firing.The EEOC also plans to seek injunctive relief and back pay for the fired employee.
Labels:
EEOC,
Religious coercion,
Title VII
Synagogue Loses Challenge To Storm Water Remediation Fee
In Shaarei Tfiloh Congregation v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, (MD App., April 27, 2018), in a suit by a synagogue the Maryland Court of Special Appeals held that Baltimore's Storm Water Remediation Fee is an excise tax, not a property tax. Thus the tax exemption for property used for public religious worship does not apply. The court also held that RLUIPA is not applicable because the Storm Water Fee is not a land use regulation.
Labels:
Jewish,
Maryland,
Property tax
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Abortion Protester's Bomb Prophecy Was Not A "True Threat"
Thames v. City of Westland, (ED MI, April 20, 2018) is a suit by a pro-life advocate who was arrested and held over the weekend on charges of making a terrorist threat while protesting at an abortion clinic. Kimberly Thames, while picketing the clinic, allegedly said "I prophesy bombs, I prophesy bombs. There is going to be a bombing in the near future." A Michigan federal district court concluded that an issue of fact exists as to whether officers had probable cause to arrest Thames:
Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.543m only criminalizes “true threats” which involve a “serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence,”.... In the vague context allegedly used by Thames, at least a jury question exists as to whether it amounts to a true threat.
The evidence suggests that Defendant Officers did not consider the statement to be a true threat as they did not direct evacuation of the clinic, did not request the assistance of a bomb squad, did not request the assistance of a bomb sniffing dog, did not search the clinic for a bomb, did not search the surrounding area for a bomb, did not search the adjacent parking lot for a bomb, did not search the dumpster for a bomb, and did not impound Thames’ vehicle for fear that a bomb might be planted in it.The court denied motions for summary judgment on wrongful arrest, retaliatory arrest (as to some defendants) and equal protection claims.
Labels:
Abortion,
Free speech,
Terrorism
Friday, April 27, 2018
House Chaplain Ousted By Speaker Ryan-- Reasons Unclear
The Hill reports that House of Representatives Chaplain Patrick Conroy has resigned under pressure to do so from House Speaker Paul Ryan. Conroy, a Jesuit priest, had served as House Chaplain since 2011. The reason for Conroy's ouster is unclear, and a bipartisan group of Representatives are circulating a letter asking Ryan to explain his action. Some have suggested that the firing stems from a prayer delivered by Conroy in November that could have been seen as critical of the Republican tax-cut bill then under consideration.
Labels:
Chaplains,
U.S. House of Representatives
USCIRF Issues 2018 Annual Report
On Tuesday, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom issued its 228-page 2018 Annual Report (full text). A press release from USCIRF summarizes its key points:
A key component of the report is USCIRF’s recommendations of countries for designation as “countries of particular concern,” or CPCs, under the International Religious Freedom Act (IRFA). CPCs are governments that engage in or tolerate systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom.
In its 2018 report, USCIRF recommends 16 countries for CPC designation: 10 that the State Department so designated in December 2017—Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—and six others—Central African Republic, Nigeria, Pakistan, Russia, Syria, and Vietnam.
The report also includes a second category, USCIRF’s Tier 2, for countries where the violations meet one or two, but not all three, of the elements of the systematic, ongoing, egregious test. In its 2018 report, USCIRF places 12 countries on its Tier 2: Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Cuba, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Laos, Malaysia, and Turkey.
In addition, the report contains USCIRF’s recommendations of “entities of particular concern,” or EPCs, a designation created by the 2016 Frank R. Wolf International Religious Freedom Act for non-state actors committing systematic, ongoing, egregious violations. The act defines a non-state actor as “a non-sovereign entity that exercises significant political power and territorial control; is outside the control of a sovereign government; and often employs violence in pursuit of its objectives.” Based on their conduct and control of territory in 2017, USCIRF recommends three groups for designation as EPCs in 2018: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in Iraq and Syria; the Taliban in Afghanistan; and al-Shabaab in Somalia.The Report also contains a series of recommendations to the Administration and to Congress.
Labels:
International religious freedom,
USCIRF
Iranian Christians Denied Refugee Status Sue
A class action lawsuit was filed last week on behalf of 87 Christians, Mandaeans, and other persecuted religious minorities from Iran who (through family members in the United States) have applied for refugee status under the Vienna-based Lautenberg-Specter program. The refugee applicants are currently in Vienna. In February 2018 their refugee applications were denied en masse "as a matter of discretion." The complaint (full text) in Doe v. Nielsen, (ND CA, filed 4/18/2018), contends that:
Defendants’ conduct violates the Administrative Procedure Act because the program changes that resulted in the mass denials constitute final agency actions that were unlawful, including because they were “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or not in accordance with law.”The Lautenberg Amendment, originally enacted in 1989, made it easier for Jews and Christians from the former Soviet Union to gain admission to the United States as refugees. In 2004, Congress enacted the Specter Amendment which added Iranian religious minorities to those eligible for special protection under the Lautenberg Amendment. Since 2004, some 30,000 Iranian religious minorities have been resettled in the United States. Christian Post reports on the lawsuit.
Rabbi Freundel's Voyeurism Sentence Reduced For Good Behavior
According to the District of Columbia Department of Corrections, the prison sentence of Rabbi Barry Freundel has been shortened by more than a year. Under a plea agreement, in 2015 Freundel was sentenced to six and one-half years in prison on 52 counts of voyeurism. Freundel had secretly videotaped 150 women in the changing room of the mikveh (ritual bath) at Washington's Kesher Israel Synagogue. (See prior posting.) JTA reports that the sentence reduction for good behavior was granted because Freundel participated as an instructor in an educational program for inmates. Freundel's new release date is Aug. 21, 2020.
Labels:
Barry Freundel,
Sentencing
Judge Rules Pro-Trump Hat Is Not Part of Any Religious Belief
New York Post reports that a New York state trial court judge on Wednesday dismissed a discrimination suit that had been filed by an accountant who was told to leave a West Village bar because he was wearing a pro-Trump "Make America Great Again" cap. At a hearing, plaintiff's lawyer, when faced with the argument that state and local anti-discrimination laws only protect religious beliefs and not political ones, attempted to turn plaintiff's case into a religious discrimination suit, saying:
The purpose of the hat is that he wore it because he was visiting the 9/11 Memorial. He was paying spiritual tribute to the victims of 9/11. The Make American Great Again hat was part of his spiritual belief.After hearing arguments, the judge took a short break and then ruled from the bench:
Plaintiff does not state any faith-based principle to which the hat relates.
District Court Again Dismisses Suit Over Board Positions On Sikh Dharma Entities
In Puri v. Khalsa, (D OR, April 26, 2018), an Oregon federal district court dismissed on ministerial exception and ecclesiastical abstention grounds a suit originally filed in 2010 growing out of disputes following the death of Yogi Bhajan, an important Sikh spiritual leader in the United States. The widow and three children of Yogi Bhajan claim that they are entitled to board positions in two nonprofit Sikh Dharma entities. In a 2017 decision, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, reviewing the trial court's dismissal solely on the basis of the pleadings, held that the suit should not have been dismissed on ministerial exception or ecclesiastical abstention grounds. (See prior posting.) In yesterday's decision, however, the district court, ruling on a summary judgment motion, held that information outside the pleadings now before the court leads to the conclusion that defendants' motion for summary judgment should be granted.
Thursday, April 26, 2018
In Bavaria, State Buildings Will Display A Cross
According to Evangelical Focus, in Germany this week the Minister President of the state of Bavaria has ordered every state administration building to hang a Christian cross in the building entrance. Minister President of Bavaria, Markus Söder says that the cross is "a fundamental symbol of the Christian Western identity" and is an "expression of the spiritual and cultural character of Bavaria." The order does not apply to municipal and regional district buildings, but they are encouraged to follow the example set by the state government. Opposition political parties in Bavaria criticized the order.
Missouri Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments On Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Discrimination
Yesterday, the Missouri Supreme Court heard oral arguments in two cases posing the question of whether the prohibition on "sex" discrimination in the state's civil rights laws includes discrimination on the basis of gender identity or sexual orientation. The first case, R.M.A. v. Blue Springs R-IV School District (audio of full arguments), involves discrimination claims by a middle school student who was born a female but transitioned to male, who has not been allowed by his school to use the boy's rest rooms or locker room. Because of his female genitalia, the school required him to use a unisex bathroom.
The second case, Lampley v. Missouri Commission on Human Rights (audio of full arguments), Harold Lampley, a state department of social services employee, alleged discrimination and retaliation because he is gay and does not exhibit stereotypical attributes of male appearance and behavior. A second employee alleged discrimination and retaliation because of her association with Lampley.
The Missouri Supreme Court's Docket Summaries page includes more information on the cases and links to briefs (including amicus briefs) filed in each case case [scroll down to SC96683 and SC 96828. AP reports on the oral arguments.
The second case, Lampley v. Missouri Commission on Human Rights (audio of full arguments), Harold Lampley, a state department of social services employee, alleged discrimination and retaliation because he is gay and does not exhibit stereotypical attributes of male appearance and behavior. A second employee alleged discrimination and retaliation because of her association with Lampley.
The Missouri Supreme Court's Docket Summaries page includes more information on the cases and links to briefs (including amicus briefs) filed in each case case [scroll down to SC96683 and SC 96828. AP reports on the oral arguments.
6th Circuit Hears Oral Arguments In Challenge To Deportation of Iraqi Chaldeans
Yesterday, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals hear oral arguments (audio of full arguments) in Hamama v. Adducci. In the case, a Michigan federal district court issued a preliminary injunction preventing Iraqi nationals (many of whom are Chaldean Christians) subject to long-standing deportation orders from being removed from the United States while they attempt to convince immigration courts that their return will subject them to persecution, torture and possible death. Subsequently the court also ordered bond hearings for those detained 6 months or longer. The appeals largely raise issues of whether federal district courts have jurisdiction to grant relief here, or whether plaintiffs should have pursued the matter through administrative immigration courts. AP reports on the 6th Circuit oral arguments
Labels:
Chaldean Christians,
Immigration,
Iraq
Parents File State Court Suit Alleging Baptism of Their Son Without Their Consent
As previously reported, last October an Ohio federal district court dismissed a suit by parents of a minor child who contended that the mentor assigned by a juvenile court to their son coerced him into being baptized against the wishes of his parents. The court held that the various defendants were not state actors or had judicial immunity. Now the parents have refiled in state court, alleging causes of action that do not require a showing of state action. The complaint (full text) in Defibaugh v. Big Brothers/ Big Sisters of Northeast Ohio Board of Trustees, (OH Com. Pl., filed 4/24/2018), alleges civil assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent training and supervision of employees and volunteers, and civil conspiracy. American Atheists issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.
Labels:
Child custody,
Ohio,
Religious coercion
Wednesday, April 25, 2018
Transcript and Audio of Arguments in Trump v. Hawaii Now Available
The full transcript and full audio recordings of today's oral arguments before the Supreme Court in Trump v. Hawaii are now available. At issue is the legality of the third version of President Trump's ban on travel to the U.S. by nationals of several countries. Washington Post, reporting on the arguments, said that the conservative majority on the Court appeared to agree that the President has authority to issue the ban.
Labels:
Donald Trump,
Immigration,
US Supreme Court
Evangelicals Organizing For Mid-Term Elections
A New York Times article posted yesterday reports:
The conservative Christian coalition that helped usher President Trump into power in 2016 is planning its largest midterm election mobilization ever, with volunteers fanning out from the church pews to the streets to register voters, raise money and persuade conservatives that they cannot afford to be complacent this year.Evangelicals cite a list of Trump's achievements as the basis for their continued support of candidates backing his agenda, despite the controversies surrounding Trump's alleged personal behavior:
He has begun the process of moving the American Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, won the confirmation of numerous judges and a Supreme Court Justice who seem likely to advance their anti-abortion cause, moved against transgender protections throughout the government, increased the ability of churches to organize politically and personally supported the March for Life.
Labels:
Donald Trump,
Election Campaigns,
Evangelicals
Supreme Court Will Hear Oral Arguments In Travel Ban Case Today
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments this morning in Trump v. Hawaii, a challenge to the legality of the most recent version of President Trump's controversial "travel ban." As explained by this argument preview from SCOTUSblog, as well as this New York Times preview, one of the major questions that the Court will face is whether Donald Trump's anti-Muslim statements during his campaign for office, and his Tweets while in office, should be considered in deciding whether his later executive action violates the Establishment Clause. SCOTUS blog's case page has links to the numerous briefs filed in the case, as well as to commentary and other primary source documents. I will post a link to the transcript of the oral argument when it becomes available later today.
3rd Circuit Allows Religious Group To Intervene In State's Challenge To Trump Contraceptive Mandate Exemptions
In Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. President United States of America, (3rd Cir., April 24, 2018), the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in a 20-page opinion reversed a Pennsylvania federal district court. The 3rd Circuit allowed Little Sisters of the Poor to intervene to defend Trump Administration interim rules expanding religious and moral exemptions from the Affordable Care Act's contraceptive coverage mandate. Becket issued a press release on the decision.
Labels:
Contraceptive coverage mandate
Senate Confirms Religious Liberty Expert For Seat On 5th Circuit
The U.S. Senate yesterday by a vote of 50- 47, confirmed Stuart Kyle Duncan, of Louisiana, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit. (Senate vote details). Duncan has an extensive record of research and litigation on church-state and religious liberty issues. (See prior posting.) In a press release from Becket, where Duncan served as general counsel for two years, the advocacy group's current president said in part:
At Becket, Kyle was a steadfast defender of religious liberty for people of all faiths and was known for his intelligence and evenhandedness. His generosity and respect for others has made him a great advocate, and will make him a fair and respected judge.UPDATE: In a statement issued April 24, the Human Rights Campaign took a different view of Duncan's record, calling him an "extremist, anti-LGBTQ nominee."
Labels:
Judiciary,
U.S. Senate
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Supreme Court: Foreign Corporations Cannot Be ATS Defendants
The U.S. Supreme Court today on Jesner v. Arab Bank, (Sup. Ct., April 24, 2018), by a vote of 5-4, held that foreign corporations may not be defendants in suits under the Alien Tort Statute. In the suit, plaintiffs claimed that terrorist attacks abroad had been facilitated by defendant, Arab Bank. The portion of Justice Kennedy's opinion that commanded the vote of 5 justices said in part:
The ATS was intended to promote harmony in international relations by ensuring foreign plaintiffs a remedy for international-law violations in circumstances where the absence of such a remedy might provoke foreign nations to hold the United States accountable.... But here, and in similar cases, the opposite is occurring. Petitioners are foreign nationals seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in damages from a major Jordanian financial institution for injuries suffered in attacks by foreign terrorists in the Middle East. The only alleged connections to the United States are the CHIPS transactions in Arab Bank’s New York branch and a brief allegation regarding a charity in Texas.Justices Thomas, Alito and Gorsuch each filed a concurring opinion. Justice Sotomayor filed a dissenting opinion, joined by Justices Ginsburg, Breyer and Kagan. Law.com reports on the decision.
Labels:
Alien Tort Statute,
US Supreme Court
State Department Releases 2017 Country Reports On Human Rights
Last Friday, the U.S. State Department released its 2017 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. The release was accompanied by remarks from Acting Secretary of State John Sullivan and a press briefing by Michael Kozak, Ambassador, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor. Secretary Sullivan highlighted a special concerns, including the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya in Burma. In the the report on each individual country, the issue of Religious Freedom is covered by a cross reference to the Department of State’s International Religious Freedom Report for 2016, released in August 2017 (see prior posting).
Labels:
State Department
Falun Gong Is A Religion Under FACE Act
In Zhang v. Chinese Anti-Cult World Alliance, (ED NY, April 23, 2018), a New York federal district court in an 84-page opinion ruled that a group of Falun Gong adherents may proceed on certain of its causes of action against individuals who have engaged in verbal and physical confrontations with plaintiffs. The court explains:
Adherents of Falun Gong live in the United States. Some are citizens of this country. It is contended by them as plaintiffs that the Chinese Government has conspired with individuals to harm followers and suppress Falun Gong in the United States by organizing and encouraging the Chinese Anti-Cult World Alliance (“CACWA”) and individuals to inflict injuries on those who follow Falun Gong.
Defendants oppose Falun Gong in Flushing, Queens, New York, and elsewhere. They deny that Falun Gong is a religion. Following the position of the Chinese Government, their opposition is based upon characterizing Falun Gong as a “cult” indoctrinating its followers with beliefs that are dangerous, unscientific, and offensive.One of plaintiffs' claims was brought under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act of 1994 which allows a civil action by any person who has suffered physical interference with the exercise of the right of religious freedom at a place of religious worship. The court held that for purposes of this statute, Falun Gong is a "religion":
Expert testimony showed that Falun Gong is at its center concerned with ultimate questions of life and the universe. Dr. Waldron explained his view that Falun Gong is derived from Buddhism and other ancient Chinese religions. There is no genuine dispute for purposes of this case: Falun Gong “occupies a place in the life of its possessor parallel to that filled by the orthodox belief in God.” Int’l Soc. For Krishna Consciousness, 650 F.2d at 440 (2d Cir. 1981). Falun Gong is a religion for purposes of the instant litigation. The jury will be so instructed.Plaintiffs were also allowed to proceed with claims of assault and battery, and bias related intimidation under the New York Civil Rights Act. Defendants were allowed to move ahead on civil rights and assault and battery counter-claims growing out of the same incidents. New York Law Journal reports on the decision.
Labels:
China,
Falun Gong,
New York
Report Finds Increase In Anti-Muslim Bias Incidents
Yesterday CAIR released its 2018 Civil Rights Report which it titles Targeted (full text). Here is part of the Key Findings section of the report:
Anti-Muslim bias incidents have continued to increase in 2017. Additionally, a greater percentage of these instances have been violent in nature, targeting American children, youth, and families who are Muslim or perceived to be Muslim.
CAIR recorded a 17 percent increase in anti-Muslim bias incidents nationwide in 2017 over 2016. This was accompanied by a 15 percent increase in hate crimes targeting American Muslims, including children, youth, and families, over the same period.
Of particular alarm is the fact that federal government agencies instigated 35 percent of all anti-Muslim bias incidents recorded in 2017. This represents an almost unprecedented level of government hostility toward a religious minority within the United States, and is counter to the American value of religious freedom.
Following the executive order barring the entry of individuals from several Muslim-majority countries into the U.S., the first version of which was signed on January 27, 2017, CAIR received a deluge of cases. Over the course of the year, CAIR recorded 464 incidents pertaining to the unconstitutional Muslim Ban. That is a staggering 18 percent of the total number of anti-Muslim bias incidents documented in 2017.
Labels:
CAIR,
Islamophobia,
Muslim
Monday, April 23, 2018
European Court Interprets Provision Allowing Churches To Hire On Basis of Religion
In Egenberger v. Evangelisches Werk für Diakonie und Entwicklung eV, (CJEU, April 17, 2018), the Court of Justice of the European Union in a preliminary ruling by its Grand Chamber interpreted Council Directive 2000/78/EC which bars employment discrimination on the basis of religion or belief. The Directive creates an exception for existing national practices as to "occupational activities within churches and other public or private organisations the ethos of which is based on religion or belief." It provides that in such organizations:
a difference of treatment based on a person’s religion or belief shall not constitute discrimination where, by reason of the nature of these activities or of the context in which they are carried out, a person’s religion or belief constitute a genuine, legitimate and justified occupational requirement, having regard to the organisation’s ethos.In the request for an interpretation from the German Federal Labor Court, the European Court held that effective judicial review must be available as to whether an occupational requirement that one hold particular religious beliefs is genuine, legitimate and justified. It went on to define how national courts should interpret the exception:
Thus the lawfulness ... of a difference of treatment on grounds of religion or belief depends on the objectively verifiable existence of a direct link between the occupational requirement imposed by the employer and the activity concerned. Such a link may follow either from the nature of the activity, for example where it involves taking part in the determination of the ethos of the church or organisation in question or contributing to its mission of proclamation, or else from the circumstances in which the activity is to be carried out, such as the need to ensure a credible presentation of the church or organisation to the outside world....
... [T]he church or organisation imposing the requirement is obliged to show, in the light of the factual circumstances of the case, that the supposed risk of causing harm to its ethos or to its right of autonomy is probable and substantial, so that imposing such a requirement is indeed necessary.
.... As the principle of proportionality is one of the general principles of EU law ..., the national courts must ascertain whether the requirement in question is appropriate and does not go beyond what is necessary for attaining the objective pursued.Law & Religion UK has more on the decision.
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
- Antony Kolenc, Religion Lessons from Europe: Intolerant Secularism, Pluralistic Neutrality, and the U.S. Supreme Court, (Pace Law Review, Vol. 30, No. 1, 2017).
- Matthew O. Jackson & Yiqing Xing, The Interaction of Communities, Religion, Governments, and Corruption in the Enforcement of Contracts and Social Norms, (April 1, 2018).
- Nathan S. Chapman, A Reformed Liberalism: Michael McConnell's Contributions to Christian Jurisprudence, (Mark David Hall and Daniel Dresibach, Great Christian Jurists in American History (Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming).
- Asim Jusic, Damned If It Doesn't and Damned If It Does: The European Court's Margin of Appreciation and the Mobilizations Around Religious Symbols, (University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law, Vol. 39, No. 3, 2018).
- Patrick Murphree, Schools in the Middle: Resolving Schools' Conflicting Duties to Transgender Students and Their Parents, 86 UMKC L. Rev. 405 (2018).
- Michele Goodwin, If Embryos and Fetuses Have Rights, (Law & Ethics of Human Rights, Vol. 11, No, 2, 2017, pp.189-224).
- Claudio Michelon & Amalia Amaya, Introduction to ‘Virtue and Law’ Symposium, (Edinburgh School of Law Research Paper No. 2018/13).
- Robert H. Sitkoff, Fiduciary Principles in Trust Law, (Oxford Handbook of Fiduciary Law, Evan Criddle, Paul Miller, and Robert H. Sitkoff eds., 2018 Forthcoming).
From SSRN (Islamic Law):
- Mohammad Sardoueinasab, Iranian Law, New Era and Transnational Law, (April 20, 2018).
- Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar, The 'Six Books' of Hadith, (November 1, 2017).
- Abdul-Jabbar, Ghassan, The Classical Tradition, (November 1, 2017).
From SmartCILP:
- Religious Rights in a Pluralistic World. Articles by Sahar F. Aziz, Md. Jahid Hossain Bhuiyan, Elena Ervas, Jan Figel?, Tassaduq Hussain Jillani, Faizan Mustafa, Jagteshwar Singh Sohi, Brett G. Scharffs. 2017 BYU Law Review 779-989.
- Gideon Sapir & Mark Goldfeder, Law, Religion, and Immigration: Building Bridges With Express Lanes, 32 Emory International Law Review 201-254 (2018).
- Douglas Laycock. The Wedding-Vendor Cases, 41 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 49-66 (2018).
- William P. Marshall, Extricating the Religious Exemption Debate from the Culture Wars, 41 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 67-77 (2018).
- Marci A. Hamilton, The Cognitive Dissonance of Religious Liberty Discourse: Statutory Rights Masquerading as Constitutional Mandates, 41 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 79-94 (2018).
- Khaled A. Beydoun, Bisecting American Islam? Divide, Conquer, and Counter-Radicalization, 69 Hastings L.J. 429-497 (2018).
- Gijs van Dijck, Victim-Orientated Tort Law in Action: An Empirical Examination of Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Cases, 15 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 126-164 (2018).
Labels:
Articles of interest
Sunday, April 22, 2018
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Merrick v. Ryan, (9th Cir., April 17, 2018), the 9th Circuit affirmed the dismissal of an inmate's free exercise and RLUIPA complaints regarding denial of religious materials and practices, finding that the district court properly relied on lack of sincere religious belief. It also upheld dismissal of equal protection of establishment clause claims.
In Covington v. Bledsoe County Corrections, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63311 (ED TN, April 16, 2018), a Tennessee federal district court allowed a Muslim inmate to move ahead with his complaint that the jail would not allow Muslim inmates to have a feast or allow outside Muslims in to cook or pray for Ramadan.
In Barfell v. Aramark, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63582 (ED WI, April 16, 2018), a Wisconsin federal district court allowed an inmate to move ahead with his complaint about a 5-day delay in receiving a religious vegan diet and his claim that religious vegan trays routinely contain animal products. However he was not allowed to proceed with his complaint regarding the quality of the vegan food.
In Slater v. Teague, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63263 (D CO, April 12, 2018), a Colorado federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63605, March 21, 2018) and dismissed a former inmate's complaints regarding availability, timing and preparation of kosher food and his limited access to Jewish religious texts.
In Hearns v. Gonzales, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63885 (ED CA, April 13, 2018), a California federal district court, adopting in part a magistrate's recommendation (2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28959, Feb. 22, 2018), allowed an inmate to move ahead with retaliation, free exercise and California Bane Act claims complaining that a correctional officer poured bleach on his legal papers and his prayer rug.
In Sims v. Wegman, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64678 (ED CA, April 16, 2018), a California federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a Nation of Islam inmate's complaint that he was refused an NOI, or alternatively a kosher diet. Dismissal of one defendant was only because of failure to effect service.
In Johnson v. Roskosci, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65405 (MD PA, April 17, 2018), a Pennsylvania federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing an inmate's complaint that beads and necklaces with religious significance were confiscated. UPDATE: The court adopted the magistrate's recommendation at 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165557, Sept. 26, 2018.
In Fusco v. Cty. of Putnam, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65444 (SD NY, April 18, 2018), a New York federal district court allowed an inmate to proceed with his claim that he was prevented from attending Catholic mass during his placement in segregation.
In Covington v. Bledsoe County Corrections, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63311 (ED TN, April 16, 2018), a Tennessee federal district court allowed a Muslim inmate to move ahead with his complaint that the jail would not allow Muslim inmates to have a feast or allow outside Muslims in to cook or pray for Ramadan.
In Barfell v. Aramark, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63582 (ED WI, April 16, 2018), a Wisconsin federal district court allowed an inmate to move ahead with his complaint about a 5-day delay in receiving a religious vegan diet and his claim that religious vegan trays routinely contain animal products. However he was not allowed to proceed with his complaint regarding the quality of the vegan food.
In Slater v. Teague, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63263 (D CO, April 12, 2018), a Colorado federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63605, March 21, 2018) and dismissed a former inmate's complaints regarding availability, timing and preparation of kosher food and his limited access to Jewish religious texts.
In Hearns v. Gonzales, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63885 (ED CA, April 13, 2018), a California federal district court, adopting in part a magistrate's recommendation (2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28959, Feb. 22, 2018), allowed an inmate to move ahead with retaliation, free exercise and California Bane Act claims complaining that a correctional officer poured bleach on his legal papers and his prayer rug.
In Sims v. Wegman, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64678 (ED CA, April 16, 2018), a California federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a Nation of Islam inmate's complaint that he was refused an NOI, or alternatively a kosher diet. Dismissal of one defendant was only because of failure to effect service.
In Johnson v. Roskosci, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65405 (MD PA, April 17, 2018), a Pennsylvania federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing an inmate's complaint that beads and necklaces with religious significance were confiscated. UPDATE: The court adopted the magistrate's recommendation at 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165557, Sept. 26, 2018.
In Fusco v. Cty. of Putnam, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65444 (SD NY, April 18, 2018), a New York federal district court allowed an inmate to proceed with his claim that he was prevented from attending Catholic mass during his placement in segregation.
Labels:
Prisoner cases
Saturday, April 21, 2018
Cert. Denied In Abortion Protester's Case
Last Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied review in March v. Mills, (Docket No.17-689, cert. denied 4/16/2018) (Order List). In the case, the U.S. 1st Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a provision of the Maine Civil Rights Act that prohibits a person making noise that can be heard within a health care facility where the intent is to jeopardize health or interfere with the delivery of health services. The appeals court rejected a constitutional challenge brought by an abortion protester who is the pastor and co-founder of a church whose mission was described as including "plead[ing] for the lives of the unborn at the doorsteps of abortion facilities." (See prior posting.) AP reported on the Supreme Court's denial of certiorari. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge for the lead.]
Labels:
Abortion,
Free speech,
US Supreme Court
Friday, April 20, 2018
New Study Says Government Services and Religiosity Are Inversely Related
An interesting new study has been published: Miron Zuckerman, Chen Li & Ed Diener, Religion as an Exchange System: The Interchangeability of God and Government in a Provider Role, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (SAGE) (April 18, 2018). The Abstract reads:
An exchange model of religion implies that if a secular entity such as government provides what people need, they will be less likely to seek help from supernatural entities. Controlling for quality of life and income inequality (Gini), we found that better government services were related to lower religiosity among countries (Study 1) and states in the United States (Study 2). Study 2 also showed that during 2008-2013, better government services in a specific year predicted lower religiosity 1 to 2 years later. In both studies, a combination of better government services and quality of life was related to a particularly low level of religiosity. Among countries, government services moderated the relation between religiosity and two measures of well-being, such that religiosity was related to greater well-being only when government services were low. We discuss the relation between the exchange model and other theoretical approaches to religion.Miami Herald reports on the study. For those with academic library privileges, the full text is available in he Sage Journals data base, or readers can request a copy from Research Gate. [Thanks to James Phillips for the lead.]
Labels:
Articles of interest
Settlement Order Entered In Chabad's Dispute With New Jersey Town
After lengthy mediation, a settlement has been reached in a lawsuit filed in 2016 by Chabad Jewish Center of Toms River, New Jersey and Rabbi Moshe Gourarie challenging Toms River's refusal to allow a Chabad Center to operate out of a large home and garage on 8 acres purchased by Gourarie in 2011. (See prior posting.) An Order reflecting the settlement was entered in February (Chabad Jewish Center of Toms River, Inc. v. Township of Toms River, (D NJ, Feb. 5, 2018), but the settlement is just now being publicized. As reported by Toms River Patch:
Rabbi Moshe Gourarie will be permitted to continue to hold religious gatherings at the Chabad's Church Road location, with certain stipulations.... Toms River Township must pay $122,500 to cover the Chabad's attorneys' fees, and an investigation by the federal Department of Justice into the township's zoning practices has been dropped.Among the stipulations in the settlement are a limit of 35 individuals (in addition to family members) for most gatherings at the Center, with that number going up to 49 for six specific holidays each year.
Thursday, April 19, 2018
6th Circuit: Ohio's Cutoff of Non-Abortion Funding To Planned Parenthood Is Unconstitutional
In Planned Parenthood of Greater Ohio, Inc. v. Himes, (6th Cir., April 18, 2018), the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals held unconstitutional a 2016 Ohio law aimed at Planned Parenthood. ORC §3701.34 prohibits the Ohio Department of Health from channeling funds it receives through six non-abortion-related federal health programs to any entity that performs or promotes nontherapeutic abortions, or which is affiliated with any entity that performs or promotes such abortions. The appeals court held that the district court correctly applied the unconstitutional conditions doctrine in enjoining enforcement of the law, saying that "the unconstitutional-conditions doctrine is not limited to First Amendment rights." According to the court, the question posed in this case is
whether Ohio may require a provider to surrender the right to provide safe and lawful abortions on its own “time and dime” as a condition of participating in government programs that have nothing to do with abortion.The court concluded:
Although Ohio women do not have a right to the programs, they do have a right not to have their access to important health services curtailed because their major abortion providers opted to protect women’s abortion rights rather than yield to unconstitutional conditions.The court also held that the law imposes unconstitutional conditions on speech by prohibiting funds from going to any entity that promotes abortion:
§3701.034 affects programs that have nothing to do with abortion or family planning, and seeks to impose restrictions on recipients’ speech outside the six government programs the statute funds.Columbus Dispatch, reporting on the decision, pointed out that two of the three judges handing down the ruling were Republican appointees. It also reports that the state Attorney General's office is reviewing the decision to determine whether it should seek en banc review or appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge and Scott Mange for the lead.]
Labels:
Abortion,
Free speech,
Ohio,
Public funding
More Rulings In South Carolina Episcopal Church Split
Earlier this week, a South Carolina federal district court issued another opinion in the long-running battle between competing Episcopal Church factions in South Carolina. While the underlying dispute over which faction owns church property has been litigated in state court, a federal court suit was filed alleging a false advertising claim under the Lanham Act. Episcopal Bishop Charles von Rosenberg who heads the minority of congregations in South Carolina that remain loyal to The Episcopal Church sued Bishop Mark Lawrence who heads the larger portion of the congregations that in 2012 broke away from the national church. Von Rosenberg alleged that Lawrence engaged in false advertising by asserting that he remained the Bishop of the Diocese. In vonRosenberg v. Lawrence, (D SC, April 16, 2018), the court allowed plaintiffs to add as defendants the Diocese, parishes and trustee corporation affiliated with Bishop Lawrence.
In a perhaps more interesting second part of the opinion, the court refused to allow the suit to be expanded to assert a novel breach of trust claim. Last year, the South Carolina Supreme Court decided the property issue largely in favor of those who remained loyal to The Episcopal Church. (See prior posting.) Plaintiffs sought to add a claim that "the parishes have breached their fiduciary duties by allowing property held in trust for TEC to be used 'in connection with a denomination' other than TEC." They sought an order against 28 Parishes "to remove from their vestries any persons who cannot demonstrate to this Court's satisfaction that they are capable of and willing to carry out their fiduciary obligations to The Episcopal Church...." The court held that it is not "free to use trust law entangle itself with religion like a fly in a spider web." It continued:
In a perhaps more interesting second part of the opinion, the court refused to allow the suit to be expanded to assert a novel breach of trust claim. Last year, the South Carolina Supreme Court decided the property issue largely in favor of those who remained loyal to The Episcopal Church. (See prior posting.) Plaintiffs sought to add a claim that "the parishes have breached their fiduciary duties by allowing property held in trust for TEC to be used 'in connection with a denomination' other than TEC." They sought an order against 28 Parishes "to remove from their vestries any persons who cannot demonstrate to this Court's satisfaction that they are capable of and willing to carry out their fiduciary obligations to The Episcopal Church...." The court held that it is not "free to use trust law entangle itself with religion like a fly in a spider web." It continued:
Entry of a judicial order telling 28 congregations whom they may or may not elect to their respective parish vestries would foster excessive judicial entanglement with religion....
Of course, there are other ways for TEC to enforce its property rights. For example, TEC could take legal possession of the parish property held in trust for its benefit, rather than asking a federal court to supervise the local congregation's use the property.Charleston Regional Business Journal reports on the decision.
Labels:
Church disputes,
Church property,
Episcopal,
Lanham Act,
South Carolina
New Jersey Supreme Court Says Grants To Churches Violate State Constitution
In Freedom From Religion Foundation v. Morris County Board of Chosen Freeholders, (NJ Sup.Ct., April 18, 2018), the New Jersey Supreme Court held that historic preservation grants to 12 churches (totaling $4.6 million) violate the Religious Aid Clause of the New Jersey Constitution. That clause (Art. I, Sec. 3) provides that no person shall be obliged to pay taxes for building or repairing any church. The court concluded that there is no implied exception to this prohibition for historical preservation.
The Court went on to hold that this interpretation does not violate the Free Exercise Clause of the U.S. Constitution:
The Court went on to hold that this interpretation does not violate the Free Exercise Clause of the U.S. Constitution:
The [U.S. Supreme Court's] holding of Trinity Lutheran does not encompass the direct use of taxpayer funds to repair churches and thereby sustain religious worship activities. See 137 S. Ct. at 2024 n.3. We therefore find that the application of the Religious Aid Clause in this case does not violate the Free Exercise Clause.Justice Solomon filed a concurring opinion:
The majority concludes that the present case exceeds the scope of Trinity Lutheran since Morris County’s taxpayer-funded grants “went toward ‘religious uses.’”... However, that conclusion ignores New Jersey’s separate and substantial government interest at stake in this case -- historical preservation. I believe that had Morris County’s program been applied in a fundamentally neutral manner, the Religious Aid Clause could not bar funding to an otherwise qualified religious institution.FFRF issued a press release announcing the decision. Daily Record reports on the decision.
Wednesday, April 18, 2018
New Video On Being Muslim In U.S.
The Pew Research Center on Religion & Public Life yesterday released an 18-minute video on Being Muslim in the U.S. The video is based on the Center's 2017 survey of U.S. Muslims as well as on personal stories from Muslims across the U.S.
Labels:
Muslim
Defendant In Dead Sea Scrolls Debate Avoids Jail
Yeshiva World reports that a long running prosecution of a literature scholar (who is also now a disbarred lawyer) has ended without a jail sentence for the defendant who was charged with online impersonation growing out of an academic dispute over authorship of the Dead Sea Scrolls:
Raphael Golb’s conviction wasn’t quite like any other: using online aliases to discredit his father’s adversary in a scholarly debate over the Dead Sea Scrolls.
The 9-year-old case got a New York law thrown out and finally ended Monday with no jail time for Golb, who persuaded a judge to sentence him to three years’ probation rather than two months in jail.
Appeals had put the jail term on hold and narrowed the counts in his criminal impersonation and forgery conviction in a curious case of ancient religious texts, digital misdeeds, academic rivalries and filial loyalty.
"Obviously, I’m relieved not to be going to jail,” Golb said, adding that he remains concerned by having been prosecuted for online activity he said was meant as satire."
Labels:
Dead Sea Scrolls
American Pastor Gets Initial Hearing In Turkish Court
According to Al-Monitor, in Turkey a North Carolina pastor finally was able to appear in court after being held in detention for 18 months. Pastor Andrew Craig Brunson, who led a small Protestant congregation in the Turkish city of Izmir, rejected the terrorism and espionage charges against him. Brunson was among the many arrested after the failed 2016 coup which Turkish officials blame on Fethullah Gulen, who is living in Pennsylvania. Many believe that the Turkish government wants to exchange Brunson for Gulen. The court adjourned Brunson's trial until May 7, and ruled that he will continue to be held in solitary confinement. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom issued a statement saying in part:
We are deeply disappointed that Turkish officials today decided to prolong their prosecution and unjust imprisonment of Pastor Andrew Brunson.
Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Israeli Court Rules "Am Yisrael Chai" Is Patriotic Slogan, Not A Prayer
In Israel, a Jerusalem Magistrate's Court yesterday ruled in favor of right-wing activist Itamar Ben Gvir in his suit for wrongful detention. The suit grows out of a 2015 incident in which police held him for several hours because of his conduct at the Temple Mount where religious practices are controlled by the Muslim Waqf. As reported by Times of Israel, under current arrangements, Jews are allowed to visit the Temple Mount, but they may not pray there. While Ben Gvir was touring the site with a Jewish group, a Muslim woman shouted Allahu Akbar at them. He shouted back"Am Yisrael chai" (the Jewish People Live), at which point Israeli police detained him for violating the no-prayer rule. The court ruled that the phrase used by Ben Gvir is a patriotic slogan, not a prayer.
No Spousal Privilege When Only Religious Marriage Was Entered
In Springfield, Massachusetts, a state trial court judge has ruled that the ex-wife of Ayyub Abdul-Alim may testify against him in his trial on firearms charges. As reported by MassLive, the judge held inapplicable here the normal rule that bars a witness from testifying to private conversations with her spouse that occurred during their marriage. The parties were married in an Islamic religious ceremony, but never obtained a state-issued marriage certificate. The court said:
While the court acknowledges that a marriage between the defendant and Ms. Stewart took place in the religious sense, there is no evidence that this marriage was sanctioned by the state through the fulfillment of the legal requirements.
Labels:
Islam,
Marriage,
Massachusetts
6th Circuit: Church Restaurant Volunteers Are Not Covered By FLSA
In Acosta v. Cathedral Buffet, Inc., (6th Cir., April 16, 2018), the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals held that church volunteers who work at a for-profit restaurant operated by the church on its campus are not subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act. The volunteers supplement paid staff. The court held that because the volunteers do not expect to receive compensation and are not economically dependent on the restaurant, they are not "employees" for purposes of the FLSA.
The more difficult question faced by the court was the concern expressed in Supreme Court cases that employers might coerce employees to make assertions that they did not expect compensation. In this case, it was argued, the church's pastor engaged in coercion of church members to volunteer:
Judge Kethledge filed a concurring opinion exploring the "coercion" argument at greater length, saying in part:
The more difficult question faced by the court was the concern expressed in Supreme Court cases that employers might coerce employees to make assertions that they did not expect compensation. In this case, it was argued, the church's pastor engaged in coercion of church members to volunteer:
Reverend Angley recruited volunteers from the church pulpit on Sundays.... [B]efore his sermon, Angley would announce to the congregation that more volunteers were needed. Angley said the restaurant was “the Lord’s buffet,” and “[e]very time you say no, you are closing the door on God.” ...Ushers would pass around slips of paper, and parishioners interested in volunteering would write down their phone number and hand it in.Judge Siler's opinion for the court rejected this argument, saying that "spiritual coercion cannot stand in for the economic coercion" that concerned the Supreme Court in prior precedent.
Judge Kethledge filed a concurring opinion exploring the "coercion" argument at greater length, saying in part:
The Department seeks to regulate spiritual conduct qua spiritual conduct, and to impose significant liability as a result. ... [T]he Department’s position here is that otherwise legal conduct—such as volunteering at a church restaurant—becomes illegal if the worker’s pastor spiritually pressures her to engage in it....
Nor is the Department even competent to make the spiritual judgment it purported to make here. “It is not within the judicial ken to question the centrality of particular beliefs or practices to a faith, or the validity of particular litigants’ interpretations of those creeds.”... That same idea of centrality perforce lies beneath any judgment about spiritual coercion. And bureaucrats are no better than judges at making that judgment. Hence it is beyond the ken of federal agencies, or the courts, to determine that congregants were spiritually coerced even though the congregants themselves say they were not....
What is perhaps most troubling about the Department’s position in this case, however, is the conceit of unlimited agency power that lies behind it. The power of a federal agency is no more than worldly. The Department should tend to what is Caesar’s, and leave the rest alone.Cleveland.com reports on the decision.
Labels:
Fair Labor Standards Act
Monday, April 16, 2018
European Human Rights Court Can Now Issue Advisory Opinions
The European Court of Human Rights announced last week that Protocol No. 16 to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (full text) has come into force after France became the tenth nation to ratify it. The Protocol allows courts in each European nation to request advisory opinions on the interpretation or application of the European Convention on Human Rights. Requests for advisory opinions are limited to cases pending before the national court when the request is made.
European Court Says Bektashi Community Should Have Been Recognized
In Bektashi Community v. The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, (ECHR, April 12, 2018), the European Court of Human Rights, in a Chamber Judgment, held that the Bektashi Community had wrongfully been denied registration as an officially recognized religious organization under Macedonia's 2007 Legal Status of Churches, Religious Communities and Religious Groups Act. The Court held in part:
[T]he ground for refusing re-registration of the applicant association was purely formal, notably that it had not been registered by the Commission as a religious entity prior to 1998, but only listed in 2000. The Government omitted to indicate any legitimate aim which this formal restriction may have pursued....
After the registration court refused to re-register the applicant association under section 35 of the 2007 Act, the applicant association launched new proceedings for its registration under the name "Bektashi Religious Community of the Republic of Macedonia"....The Court also rejected a name-confusion argument, finding that the name is "sufficiently specific to distinguish it from the 'Ehlibeyt Bektashi Religious Group of Macedonia'". The Court went on:
The other ground relied on by the domestic courts concerned the doctrinal sources of the applicant association, which they found to be identical to the doctrinal sources of the already registered "Islamic Religious Community". That conclusion was made on the basis of an assessment by the domestic courts of the applicant association's fundamental precepts and their comparison with the precepts of the "Islamic Religious Community" .... In the Court's view, such an assessment and interpretation of the applicant association's basic tenets of creed was incompatible with the State's role as a neutral and impartial organiser of the exercise of various religions, faiths and beliefs, which excludes, save for very exceptional cases, any discretion on the part of the State to assess the legitimacy of religious beliefs or the ways in which those beliefs are expressed....Law & Religion UK has more on the decision.
Labels:
European Court of Human Rights,
Islam,
Macedonia
USCIRF Issues New Report On Religious Freedom Challenges In Burma
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has recently issued an update on religious freedom challenges in Burma. (Full text of report). The report, which particularly focuses on the conditions faced by Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine State, also more broadly summarizes the situation in the country:
Successive governments in Burma have failed to ensure that all religious communities are able to practice their faith freely, openly, and without fear, and in some cases have directly perpetrated, tolerated, or ignored religious- and ethnic-based discrimination and abuses. Religious and ethnic minorities are disadvantaged by:
- Institutionalized discrimination;
- Increasing anti-Muslim sentiment and the related rise of Buddhist nationalism, which has affected all religious minorities;
- A culture of impunity and lack of accountability for human rights abuses and crimes committed by military and nonstate actors; and
- Decades of ethnic armed conflicts and internal displacement.
The deprivation of Rohingya Muslims’ rights became even more acute following 2012 communal violence in Rakhine State...
Labels:
Burma,
International religious freedom,
Rohingya
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
- R. Michael Cassidy, Catholic Social Thought and Criminal Justice Reform, (Journal of Catholic Social Thought, Forthcoming).
- Giancarlo Anello & Mohamed A. Arafa, The Meaning of ‘Religion’ in the Legal Context: Some Remarks on the Pragmatics of Islam in Egyptian Law in Multicultural Societies Law, (39 Rivista Telematica [Milan Univ. L. J. “Italy”] (Fall 2017)).
- Trudo Lemmens, Charter Scrutiny of Canada's Medical Assistance in Dying Law and the Shifting Landscape of Belgian and Dutch Euthanasia Practice, (85 Supreme Court Law Review (2nd Series) (Forthcoming)).
- Micah Schwartzman, Official Intentions and Political Legitimacy: The Case of the Travel Ban, (NOMOS LXI: Political Legitimacy(2018)).
- Amos N. Guiora, Inciting Terrorism on the Internet: The Limits of Tolerating Intolerance, (Incitement to Terrorism (A. Bayefsky & L. Blank, eds, Brill 2018)).
- Sabir Ali, Usman Umer & Muhammad Waqas Butt, Role of English Press in Dissemination of Liberal Values for Women Empowerment in Pakistan: Honor Killing of Qandeel Baloch, (May 30, 2016).
- Mohammed Hussain, Vanja Hamzić: Sexual and Gender Diversity in the Muslim World: History, Law and Vernacular Knowledge, (VRUE Journal, Spring 2018, Forthcoming).
- Linda Sugin, Competitive Philanthropy: Charitable Naming Rights, Inequality, and Social Norms, (79 Ohio St. L. J. _ (2018)).
From SmartCILP:
- Gregory Brazeal, Between Description and Prescription: Law, Wittgenstein, and Constitutional Faith, 120 West Virginia Law Review 363-426 (2017).
Labels:
Articles of interest
Sunday, April 15, 2018
Tax Objector's Strategy To Prevent Garnishment Does Not Constitute Tax Evasion
The Oregonian last week reported on a partial court victory by Christian tax objector Michael Bowman who for the last nearly 20 years has refused to file income tax returns unless some accommodation is made so none of his tax monies support abortion. When in 2012 Oregon tax authorities began to garnish Bowman's bank account, he moved to keep only a small balance in his checking account by cashing his pay checks rather than depositing them. This led federal authorities last year to charge him with felony counts of tax evasion. However, last week an Oregon federal district court held that merely cashing pay checks, when his income was fully reported to the IRS, could not constitute tax evasion. However Bowman still faces four federal misdemeanor counts of willful failure to file tax returns.
Labels:
Abortion,
Internal Revenue Code,
Taxes
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Buckley v. Cook, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59987 (SD IL, April 9, 2018), an Illinois federal district court dismissed without prejudice an inmate's complaint that the Alton County Jail did not offer formal religious services on Sundays. The court allowed him to proceed on certain unrelated claims.
In Little v. Guice, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59995 (WD NC, April 6, 2018), a North Carolina federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that he was sanctioned for writing his cousin about the Moorish American faith.
In Chila v. Camden County Correctional Facility, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60547 ( NJ, April 9, 2018), a New Jersey federal district court dismissed a female Muslim inmate's complaint that her hijab was taken from her, she was denied access to a Quran, and she could not leave her cell for religious worship.
In Johnson v. Bienkoski, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61560 (MD PA, April 10, 2018), a Pennsylvania federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing without prejudice an inmate's complaint that his religious beads were confiscated and his commissary privileges were restricted during Ramadan.
In Robertson v. Call, 2018 Kan. App. Unpub. LEXIS 274 (KA App., April 13, 2018), a Kansas Court of Appeals agreed that a prison had not violated the Establishment Clause by limiting a Messianic Jewish inmate's visits with his rabbi to interaction through video conferencing rather than allowing face-to-face visits. It also agreed that a visit by a Christian ministries group had not violated the Establishment Clause.
In Little v. Guice, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59995 (WD NC, April 6, 2018), a North Carolina federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that he was sanctioned for writing his cousin about the Moorish American faith.
In Chila v. Camden County Correctional Facility, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60547 ( NJ, April 9, 2018), a New Jersey federal district court dismissed a female Muslim inmate's complaint that her hijab was taken from her, she was denied access to a Quran, and she could not leave her cell for religious worship.
In Johnson v. Bienkoski, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61560 (MD PA, April 10, 2018), a Pennsylvania federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing without prejudice an inmate's complaint that his religious beads were confiscated and his commissary privileges were restricted during Ramadan.
In Robertson v. Call, 2018 Kan. App. Unpub. LEXIS 274 (KA App., April 13, 2018), a Kansas Court of Appeals agreed that a prison had not violated the Establishment Clause by limiting a Messianic Jewish inmate's visits with his rabbi to interaction through video conferencing rather than allowing face-to-face visits. It also agreed that a visit by a Christian ministries group had not violated the Establishment Clause.
Labels:
Prisoner cases
In Michigan, Battle Over Appropriations For State Mandates On Private Schools, Continues
Detroit News yesterday reported on developments in Michigan in the battle over legislative appropriations to fund state mandates imposed on private and religious schools-- requirements such as fire drills and criminal background checks. Last year, the state Court of Claims issued a preliminary injunction barring payment of the $2.5 million that the legislature had appropriated. The Court's decision was based on Michigan's Blaine Amendment (inserted in the state constitution in 1970) that bars public funds for "any private, denominational or other nonpublic, pre-elementary, elementary, or secondary school". (See prior posting.) On March 12, Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic school in Grand Rapids, along with parents and state legislators, filed a counter-suit in the Court of Claims contending that the Blaine Amendment violates the free exercise, free speech and equal protection clauses of the federal constitution. According to the Detroit News:
The Grand Rapids school’s lawsuit argues the state’s so-called Blaine Amendment was developed in a furor of “anti-Catholic sentiment” and should be disregarded in the debate over the $2.5 million state allocation for non-public schools.The enjoined funding has been included by the legislature, over the opposition of Gov. Rick Snyder, in the proposed 2019 budget.
Labels:
Establishment Clause,
Michigan,
Public funding
Friday, April 13, 2018
Michigan Supreme Court Reinstates Consumer Protection Challenge To Gym's Transgender Rules
The Michigan Supreme Court in Cormier v. PF Fitness- Midland, LLC, (MI Sup. Ct., April 6, 2018), reversed a state appeals court's dismissal of a Michigan Consumer Protection Act lawsuit against Planet Fitness. The lower court had held that plaintiff had abandoned her Consumer Protection Act claim. Her suit challenges Planet Fitness' cancellation of her membership after her warnings to others about a transgender woman at the club. The gym's rules allow transgender individuals to use locker rooms consistent with their gender identity. AP reports on the decision. [revised]
Labels:
Michigan,
Transgender
Judge's Suit Challenging His Removal From Death Penalty Cases Moves Ahead
In Griffen v. Arkansas Supreme Court, (ED AR, April 12, 2018), an Arkansas federal district court held that sovereign and judicial immunity do not bar a suit for declaratory relief brought by a state court judge against justices of the Arkansas Supreme Court after they barred him from hearing death penalty cases. Plaintiff, who is also a pastor, was active in demonstrations and vigils opposing the death penalty. He contends that the action taken against him amounts to retaliation based on his speech and religion in violation of the 1st Amendment and the Arkansas Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The court held that he had stated a plausible claim for relief. AP reports on the decision.
UPDATE: On April 24, defendants filed a writ of mandamus with the 8th Circuit challenging the district court's refusal to dismiss the lawsuit. (Arkansas Online).
UPDATE: On April 24, defendants filed a writ of mandamus with the 8th Circuit challenging the district court's refusal to dismiss the lawsuit. (Arkansas Online).
Dolphins Cheerleader Claims Religious Discrimination In Limits On Her Social Media Posts
According to USA Today, former Miami Dolphins cheerleader Kristan Ann Ware this week filed a complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations against the Dolphins and the National Football League alleging religious and gender discrimination. She says that in her annual work review, she was told not to discuss on social media her religious decision to abstain from sex before marriage. She had posted a photo of her baptism online. She contends that the players are not held to the same standards regarding discussion of religion on social media.
Magazine Says Muslims Are Thriving In America
National Geographic has posted a lengthy article titled How Muslims, Often Misunderstood, Are Thriving in America. Here is an excerpt:
Today an estimated 3.45 million Muslims in America are living in a climate of hostility, their faith distorted by violent extremists on one end and an anti-Muslim movement on the other. The rise in animosity was stoked by fiery anti-Muslim rhetoric from conservative commentators and politicians, including the president. Trump repeatedly has described Islam as a threat, retweeting anti-Muslim videos from a British hate group and keeping his distance from the religion, like when he decided the White House, for the first time in more than two decades, would not host a dinner to mark Ramadan....
And yet Muslim communities in America are thriving. Modest clothes for women who cover their hair are being created by Muslims in the U.S. under labels like Haute Hijab and Austere Attire, and Macy’s is now selling fashion for Muslim women. Halal products, the Muslim equivalent of kosher, are available at Costco and Whole Foods. Mattel has even debuted a Muslim Barbie. The doll, complete with a head scarf, is modeled on Olympic fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad. There’s a Muslim liberal arts college in Berkeley, California, and a graduate school in Claremont, California. Community activism is thriving, and Muslim activists are forging alliances with other marginalized communities.
Labels:
Muslim
Thursday, April 12, 2018
Trump Issues Proclamation On Holocaust Remembrance
Today is Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day). Yesterday President Trump issued a Proclamation (full text) asking the people of the United States:
to observe the Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust, April 12 through April 19, 2018, and the solemn anniversary of the liberation of Nazi death camps, with appropriate study, prayers and commemoration, and to honor the memory of the victims of the Holocaust and Nazi persecution by internalizing the lessons of this atrocity so that it is never repeated.
Labels:
Donald Trump,
Holocaust
New Report On Worldwide Antisemitic Incidents
Yesterday Tel Aviv University's Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry released its 103-page report titled Antisemitism Worldwide General Analysis 2017 . The Center highlights this excerpt:
In 2017, there was a moderate worldwide average decrease in antisemitic violent incidents that were directed at Jewish people, their communities and their private property, of about 9% (327 cases compared to 361 in 2016, according to the Kantor Center criteria). It does not include yet the numbers of violent incidents in France, which the Jewish security body is still elaborating. During the years 2006 to 2014, the violent cases worldwide numbered between 600 to 700 per year, while during recent years they decreased 300 to 400. But it should be emphasized that some of the recent violent cases have been perpetrated more brutally, causing more harm. And most important – this decrease is overshadowed by what is seen by the Jewish communities as a dramatic increase in all other forms of antisemitic manifestations, many of which are not even reported, most notably harassment in schools (some Jewish pupils moved to Catholic schools) and on social media.AP reports on the data.
Labels:
Antisemitism
Law Student Religious Liberty Writing Competition Announced
The J. Reuben Clark Law Society has announced its 9th Annual Religious Liberty Writing Competition for law students and graduate students in related areas. The deadline for submissions is July 1, 2018.
Labels:
Religious liberty
At Hearing Judicial Nominee Retreats From Prior Pro-Life Comments
Yesterday the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the nomination of Wendy Vitter to be United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana. NPR reports on the hearing:
Wendy Vitter, nominated by President Trump for a federal judgeship, tried Wednesday to walk back several controversial comments she made about abortion and birth control.
Questioned by skeptical Democrats at her confirmation hearing, she maintained she could "put aside" her long-held "pro-life" advocacy, and as a judge enforce the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision on abortion rights.
In particular, Vitter sought to distance herself from a brochure she had appeared to endorse while leading a panel at a pro-life conference in 2013. The panel was called "Abortion Hurts Women," and the brochure promoted a variety of unsubstantiated claims linking birth control pills to breast cancer, cervical and liver cancers, and "violent death."
Labels:
Abortion,
Judiciary,
Louisiana,
Senate Judiciary Committee
Indiana Homicide Law Expanded To Cover Non-Abortion Killing of Fetus At Any Stage
On March 25, Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb signed Senate Bill 203 (full text). The new law expands the state's murder and manslaughter laws to include killing of a fetus "at any stage of development". Prior law covered only killing of a fetus that has attained viability. The law does not apply to a lawfully performed abortion or to a pregnant woman who terminates her own pregnancy or kills a fetus she is carrying. Liberty Counsel issued a press release on the new law.
Wednesday, April 11, 2018
Update On Third Travel Ban Developoments
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on April 25 in Trump v. Hawaii, a group of challenges, including an Establishment Clause challenge, to President Trump's third travel ban. (See prior posting.) Over 70 amicus briefs have been filed in the case. Links to them are on SCOTUSblog's case page. Meanwhile, yesterday the White House announced that the President has signed a Proclamation removing Chad from the list of countries covered by the travel ban, saying in part:
Republic of Chad has improved its identity-management and information sharing practices sufficiently to meet the baseline security standard of the United States. Chad nationals will therefore again be able to receive visas for travel to the United States.
Labels:
Chad,
Donald Trump,
Immigration
Tuesday, April 10, 2018
India Supreme Court Affirms Right To Choose Religion and Marriage Partner
In Jahan v. Asokan K.M., (India Sup. Ct., April 9, 2018), a 3-judge panel of India's Supreme Court, in 61 pages of opinions, set aside a High Court's order that had annulled the marriage of a 26-year old student who had converted to Islam in order to marry. The court strongly affirmed the right of individuals to choose their religious faith and their marriage partner. The court's opinion by Chief Justice Misra said in part
It is obligatory to state here that expression of choice in accord with law is acceptance of individual identity. Curtailment of that expression ... destroy the individualistic entity of a person. The social values and morals have their space but they are not above the constitutionally guaranteed freedom. The said freedom is both a constitutional and a human right. Deprivation of that freedom which is ingrained in choice on the plea of faith is impermissible. Faith of a person is intrinsic to his/her meaningful existence. To have the freedom of faith is essential to his/her autonomy....
In the case at hand, the father ... may feel that there has been enormous transgression of his right to protect the interest of his daughter but his view point or position cannot be allowed to curtail the fundamental rights of his daughter who, out of her own volition, married the appellant.A concurring opinion by Justice Chandrachud added:
The right to marry a person of one’s choice is integral to Article 21 of the Constitution. The Constitution guarantees the right to life.... Intrinsic to the liberty which the Constitution guarantees as a fundamental right is the ability of each individual to take decisions on matters central to the pursuit of happiness. Matters of belief and faith, including whether to believe are at the core of constitutional liberty. The Constitution exists for believers as well as for agnostics. The Constitution protects the ability of each individual to pursue a way of life or faith to which she or he seeks to adhere. Matters of dress and of food, of ideas and ideologies, of love and partnership are within the central aspects of identity.... Society has no role to play in determining our choice of partners.One India and The Hindu report on the decision.
Labels:
Conversion,
India,
Marriage
Anti-Transgender Bathroom Initiative Voted Down In Anchorage
Anchorage Daily News reports that in Alaska's first-ever vote-by-mail election, a so-called "bathroom bill" initiative was defeated by Anchorage voters. The Ballot Measure would have required that all municipally-owned facilities limit restrooms and locker rooms by sex as determined biologically rather than by gender identity. The initiative would also have permitted other employers and public accommodations to adopt the same policy. With virtually all ballots counted, the vote as reported last Friday was 40,378 opposed and 36,234 in favor. Metro Weekly reports on reactions to the defeat.
Labels:
Alaska,
Transgender
Monday, April 09, 2018
Trump Cabinet Has Bible Study Group
BBC reports that President Trump's Cabinet has a weekly Bible study group, led by former professional basketball player-turned-pastor, Ralph Drollinger. While not all Cabinet members attend each week, the group has ten "sponsors". Members of the group include Vice-President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Some of the Cabinet members originally got to know Drollinger through his Capitol Ministries study groups in the House and Senate. According to BBC:
President Trump is not a member of Drollinger's group - but he is a Christian, and does get Drollinger's eight-page print-outs most weeks.
"He writes me back notes on my bible studies," says Drollinger.
"He's got this leaky Sharpie felt-tip pen that he writes all capital letters with. 'Way to go Ralph, really like this study, keep it up.' Stuff like that."[Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]
Labels:
Christian,
Donald Trump
Suit Challenges Limits On Homeless Drop-In Center
In St. Paul, Minnesota last week, Listening House, a daytime drop-in center for homeless, disadvantaged and lonely people, filed suit against the city seeking to prevent enforcement of a City Council resolution imposing unworkable limits on the operation of the center at its new home in the basement of First Lutheran Church. The complaint (full text) in Listening House of St. Paul, Inc. v. City of St. Paul, (MN Dist. Ct., filed 4/2/2018), contends that the restrictions are arbitrary and capricious. The Twin Cities Pioneer Press reported yesterday that First Lutheran Church has now joined as a plaintiff in the lawsuit.
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
- Mary Nobles Hancock, God Save the United States and this Honorable County Board of Commissioners: Lund, Bormuth, and the Fight Over Legislative Prayer, (76 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. (2019 Forthcoming)).
- Jonathan Moreno, Church Attendance, Petty Crime and Rain, (March 29, 2018).
- Steve Sanders, Dignity and Social Meaning: Obergefell, Windsor, and Lawrence as Constitutional Dialogue, (Fordham Law Review, Forthcoming).
- Shawn Fields, Brief of Amici Curiae Constitutional Law Scholars in Support of Respondents in Trump V. Hawaii, 17-965, (San Diego Legal Studies Paper No. 18-340 (2018)).
- Steve Sanders, Pavan v. Smith: Equality for Gays and Lesbians in Being Married, Not Just in Getting Married, (American Constitution Society Supreme Court Review 2016-2017).
- Timothy Horley, Rethinking the Heckler's Veto After Charlottesville, (Virginia Law Review, Vol. 104, No. 8, 2018).
- L.A. Latif, An Explication on Broadening the Definition and Scope of Maximum Available Resources Under General Comment 14 of the ICESCR to Include Islamic Taxation in Financing the Right to Health, (Biomed J Sci & Tech Res 1(3), 2017).
From elsewhere:
- Camilia R. Brown, The Violent Persecution of the Iranian Bahá’Ã: A Call to Take a Human Capabilities Approach to Defining Genocide, 43 Brooklyn Journal of International Law 361 (2018).
Labels:
Articles of interest
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