Tuesday, November 05, 2013

California City Sued Over Sectarian Prayers and City Chaplain

The Freedom From Religion Foundation has announced that it filed a state court lawsuit last week against the city of Pismo Beach, California challenging on state constitutional grounds sectarian prayers at city council meetings and the appointment of a City Chaplain. The complaint (full text) in Freedom From Religion Foundation v. City of Pismo Beach, (CA Super. Ct., filed 11/1/2013) alleges that over a nearly 5-year period, all but one of the 126 prayers were addressed to the Christian God, with 112 of those prayers being delivered by the city chaplain, a Pentecostal clergyman. The complaint continues:
The prayers advance and proselytize for Christianity. They distort and fabricate American history to further the appearance that our government endorses and supports Christianity, and they disparage non-Christians by claiming that not living in accordance with the Christian god’s rule of law is sinful and wrong.
... The City established a Christian Chaplaincy and appointed Defendant Paul Jones ... to that position eight years ago.... This chaplaincy is a government office with solely religious functions, and this City Chaplain receives benefits at public expense...

Irish Constitutional Convention Recommends Replacing Blasphemy Offense With Ban On Inciting Religious Hatred

Ireland is in the midst of an unusual constitution revision process.  A Convention on the Constitution made up of 66 randomly selected citizens who are broadly representative of Irish society, and 33 parliamentarians nominated by their respective political parties, are making recommendations to the Oireachtas for amendments that will ultimately be put to the people for a vote. According to a news release by the Convention, on Sunday the Convention voted 53% to 38% to replace the current constitutional provision on blasphemy with a general provision banning incitement to religious hatred. Irish Times reports on the vote. [Thanks to Volokh Conspiracy via Steven H. Sholk for the lead.]

Monday, November 04, 2013

New NYC Mayor-- Whoever Wins-- Will Be More Accommodating To Religion

In a report yesterday on the upcoming mayoral election, the New York Times says that either of the top two candidates-- Bill de Blasio or Joseph Lhota-- will be more accommodating of religious practices than Mayor Bloomberg has been:
They [both] say they would accommodate two of the most important Muslim holy days [on school calendars], allow church services on school property, and work with Jewish leaders to ease the city’s supervision of circumcision rituals.

New York Court Confirms Part of Beth Din's Rulings In Dispute Over Kosher Certification In Crown Heights

Matter of Va'Ad Hakohol Deschunas Crown Heights v. Va'Ad Hakashrus of Crown Heights Corp., (Kings Co. NY Sup. Ct., Oct. 17, 2013), is the latest installment in a complicated and long-running dispute that began in 2006 between three local Jewish organizations in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn over control of the kosher certification process and the funds generated from it.  The feuding organizations are the Crown Heights Beth Din that serves as religious consultant that certifies food as kosher; Hakashrus that provides butchers and inspectors to implement kosher certification; and Hakohol which is not part of the certification process.

Four lawsuits filed in the matter were eventually referred for voluntary arbitration to a 5-member panel of rabbinical judges (the Rosenberg Beth Din) which in 2010 issued four rulings, one of which ordered an election to fill a vacancy on the 3-person Crown Heights Beth Din.  In 2011, the Rosenberg Beth Din issued two supplemental rulings, one of which rejected challenges to the qualifications of Rabbi Joseph Shaya Braun who was elected to the Crown Heights Beth Din in the ordered election.

The New York trial court was then petitioned to confirm the arbitration awards of the Rosenberg Beth Din.  In June 2012 it refused to do so, but subsequently allowed re-argument on the issue.  In this decision it confirmed parts of the awards entered by the Rosenberg Beth Din, including its holding that Rabbi Braun was properly elected to the Crown Heights Beth Din, saying:
Turning to the Jan. 3, 2011 supplemental award, the Court finds that its unambiguous pronouncement that Rabbi Braun was elected in accordance with religious law is adequate for the Court to confirm this award. "The path of analysis, proof and persuasion by which an arbitrator reaches a conclusion is beyond judicial scrutiny".... The Rosenberg Beth Din's endorsement of Rabbi Braun's credentials to qualify as a member of Crown Heights Beth Din, therefore, is controlling. The Court is proscribed from evaluating Rabbi Braun's credentials, as doing so would infringe "upon a religious community's independence from secular control or manipulation"
The New York court however remanded to the Rosenberg Beth Din the question of control, operation and ownership of the assets of Hakashrus.

Recent Articles of Interest

From SSRN:
From SmartCILP:

Sunday, November 03, 2013

President Sends Diwali Greetings

Today was the festival of Diwali. On Friday, the White House released a statement (full text) from President Obama sending good wishes to those celebrating the holiday, saying in part:
For the Hindus, Jains, Sikhs and Buddhists celebrating Diwali this weekend, the Festival of Lights reaffirms the things in life that matter most.  Dancing, celebration, and good food remind us that life’s greatest joys are the simple pleasures that come from spending time with people we love.  Contemplation and prayer remind us that that people of all faiths have an obligation to perform seva, or service to others.  And the flame of the diya, or lamp, reminds us that light will ultimately triumph over darkness.  Here in the United States, Diwali also reminds us that our nation is home to many faiths and traditions, and that our diversity makes us stronger, which is why I’m proud that this year Democrats and Republicans in Congress joined together for the first-ever celebration of Diwali on Capitol Hill....

Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases

In Fulbright v. Jones, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 154414 (WD OK, Aug. 29, 2013), an Oklahoma federal magistrate judge, recommending rejection of a contempt petition, found that authorities had reasonably complied with a previous injunction requiring them to provide a Jewish inmate with a kosher diet.

In Perrilla v. Fischer, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 154449 (WD NY, Oct. 24, 2013), a New York federal district court dismissed, with leave to amend, a Muslim inmate's complaint that he was not permitted to attend congregate religious services while in the Special Housing Unit, and that he was denied or given ill-prepared Halal meals during Ramadan.

In McDaniel v. Fizer, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 154965 (D AZ, Oct. 29, 2013), an Arizona federal district court denied without prejudice a Muslim inmate's petition for a preliminary injunction to require a change in his religious diet so it will also satisfy his health needs (by substituting other food for raw cabbage).

In Calhoun-El v. Stouffer, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155108 (D MD, Oct, 28, 2013), a Maryland federal district court dismissed complaints by an inmate who is a member of the Moorish Science Temple of America that his headdress was confiscated on four occasions, that his ability to participate in the Ramadan fast was interfered with, and that his request to celebrate his religious holiday was denied.

In Blackwell v. Green, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155181 (D MD, Oct. 20, 2013), a Maryland federal district court dismissed a Muslim inmate's complaints regarding shower schedules and medication and ice distribution that allegedly interfered with his obligations surrounding Friday prayer and Ramadan. It also dismissed his claim that he was harassed by someone writing "Jesus" on his cell door.

In Redd v. Lutgen, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155252 (ND IA, Oct. 28, 2013), an Iowa federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing a Muslim inmate's claim that his religious exercise was substantially burdened when he was required to sign a Ramadan Agreement as a condition of participating in the Eid feast.

In Nosair v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155309 (SD IL, Oct, 30, 2013), an Illinois federal district court permitted a Sunni Muslim inmate of Arab descent to proceed with his equal protection claim that he was confined in restrictive conditions because of his race and religion. However his claim of discriminatory treatment of certain Muslim inmates in halfway house placement was dismissed.

In Sleighter v. County of Kent, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 156113 (WD MI, Oct. 31, 2013), a Michigan federal district court permitted a Jewish inmate to proceed against the county and its sheriff on claims that his need for a kosher diet was not adequately accommodated and that the jail favored Christianity over other religions by scheduling Christian religious services in the common living areas, setting aside a section of the called the "God Pod," encouraging conversion to Christianity, and not accommodating other religions.

In Rivera v. Byars, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 156681 (D SC, Oct. 31, 2013), a South Carolina federal district court rejected a magistrate's recommendation and held that a former inmate of the Rastafarian faith can proceed on his free exercise claim for damages alleging that he was not provided an adequate vegetarian diet consistent with his religious faith.

Suit In Australia Invokes Racial Discrimination Act Against Boycott of Israeli Academics

In Australia, Shurat HaDin - Israel Law Center last month filed a lawsuit under  Australia’s 1975 Racial Discrimination Act against Jake Lynch, director of the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney.  As reported by Haaretz yesterday, the suit claims that Lynch's invocation of the anti-Israeli "Boycott/ Divestment/ Sanctions" movement in refusing to sponsor Hebrew University academic Dan Avnon for a fellowship in Australia violates the statute's ban on national origin discrimination.  This is the first time that the anti-discrimination statute has been invoked against the BDS Movement, which includes boycotts of Israeli academics in protest of Israeli policy regarding Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. The suit was filed after mediation at the Australian Human Rights Commission failed several month ago.

Saturday, November 02, 2013

Defense Secretary Chastises State National Guards That Are Refusing To Issue ID To Same-Sex Spouses

According to a report this week from American Forces Defense Service, nine states are defying a Department of Defense directive instructing National Guard facilities to issue new ID cards to same-sex spouses.  The new IDs will allow them to obtain spousal and family military benefits in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision striking down Sec. 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act.  Indiana, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and West Virginia, however, are requiring their National Guard members to go to a federal military base if they want to obtain the new ID. In a speech (full text) to an Anti-Defamation League Dinner on Thursday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in part:
... [A]ll spouses of service members are entitled to DoD ID cards, and the benefits that come with them.  But several states today are refusing to issue these IDs to same-sex spouses at National Guard facilities.  Not only does this violate the states’ obligations under federal law, but their actions have created hardship and inequality by forcing couples to travel long distances to federal military bases to obtain the ID cards they’re entitled to.
This is wrong.  It causes division among our ranks, and it furthers prejudice, which DoD has fought to extinguish, as has the ADL.
Today, I directed the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, General Frank Grass, to take immediate action to remedy this situation.  At my direction, he will meet with the Adjutants General from the states where these ID cards are being declined and denied.  The Adjutants General will be expected to comply with both lawful direction and DoD policy, in line with the practices of 45 other states and jurisdictions.

Objections to .HALAL and .ISLAM Top Level Domains Rejected

As previously reported, in June 2012 the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) published a list of proposed new generic Top-Level Domain (gTLD) names for which various applicants are seeking approval. Some of the proposed new Internet addresses carry religious connotations. ICANN has in place a complicated process for objecting to a proposed gTLD.  One basis for objection is "substantial opposition to the gTLD ... from a significant portion of the community that the gTLD string targets." On October 24, two separate opinions were handed down by the International Center of Expertise of the International Chamber of Commerce, the organization designated to adjudicate community objections.  The decisions upheld the proposed .HALAL top level domain (CASE No. EXP/427/ICANN/44, full text of opinion), and the proposed .ISLAM top level domain (CASE No. EXP/430/ICANN/47, full text of opinion). In both cases the objector was the United Arab Emirates Telecommunications Regulatory Authority and the applicant for the gTLD was a Turkish company.

Ukrainian Appeals Court Says Kiev Synagogue Can Keep Loaned Torah Scrolls

JTA earlier this week reported on a mid-October ruling by the Kiev Economic Court of Appeals in the Ukraine that allows the city's Central Synagogue to retain 18 Torah scrolls that the State Archives Committee wanted returned for inspection, fearing they may have been damaged.  The Committee first requested return of the scrolls in 2007 (Jerusalem Post). The scrolls were seized by the Soviets in the 1920's, but after Ukrainian independence in 1991-- with no restitution law in place-- some scrolls were loaned back to synagogues under unclear arrangements with the government.  The particular scrolls at issue here were loaned back to Central Synagogue in 1995.

Friday, November 01, 2013

D.C. Circuit: Contraceptive Mandate Imposes Substantial Burden On Small Business Owners' Free Exercise

In an important development today, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision producing three separate opinions, held that the Catholic owners of a for-profit small business were likely to succeed on the merits of a RFRA challenge to the Affordable Care Act. The appeals court reversed the district court's denial of a preliminary injunction, and remanded the case for the district court to make findings about the other preliminary injunction factors. In Gilardi v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, (DC Cir., Nov. 1, 2013), two brothers, Francis and Philip Gilardi, owners of Freshway Foods and Freshway Logistics, both Ohio corporations, claim that their free exercise rights, and those of their businesses, are burdened by the requirement that they furnish their employees health insurance covering contraception, sterilization and abortion.

The court's opinion written by Judge Brown held that secular corporations do not enjoy free exercise rights:
When it comes to corporate entities, only religious organizations are accorded the protections of the Clause. And we decline to give credence to the notion that the for-profit/non-profit distinction is dispositive, as that, too, is absent from the Clause’s history. Fortunately, we need not opine here on what a “religious organization” is, as the Freshway companies have conceded they do not meet that criterion.
The court also rejected the claim that the corporations may assert their owners' free exercise rights:
In [EEOC v. Townley Engineering & Manufacturing Co.] , the Ninth Circuit concluded— without much in the way of legal substantiation—that the corporation was “merely the instrument through and by which [the owners] express[ed] their religious beliefs.”... 
Admittedly, there is a certain theological congruence to Townley’s  characterization. The Bible says “faith without works is dead.” James 2:26.... As amici point out, not only are Catholic employers morally responsible for the management of their companies, “instructing or encouraging someone else to commit a wrongful act is itself a grave moral wrong—i.e., ‘scandal’—under Catholic doctrine.” ... When even attenuated participation may be construed as a sin, ... it is not for courts to decide that the corporate veil severs the owner’s moral responsibility. But dogma does not dictate justiciability....
Judge Edwards, while dissenting as to other parts of the decision, joined in the portions of Judge Brown's opinion rejecting the corporate claims.  Judge Randolph did not join in this part of Judge Brown's opinion, believing that the court need not reach this issue.

Judge Brown went on, in a section of her opinion joined by all three judges, to hold that the individual owners of the business have standing to assert their claim under RFRA:
If the companies have no claim to enforce—and as nonreligious corporations, they cannot engage in religious exercise—we are left with the obvious conclusion: the right belongs to the Gilardis, existing independently of any right of the Freshway companies. Thus, the Gilardis’ injury—which arises therefrom—is “separate and distinct,” providing us with an exception to the shareholder-standing rule.
In his separate concurring opinion, Judge Randolph added another reason that the Gilardi brothers have standing.  The corporations had elected pass-through treatment under Subchapter S for federal tax purposes.  This means that the tax penalties will directly affect the shareholders' individual tax returns.

Then, in a portion of the opinion joined by Judge Randolph, Judge Brown concluded that the contraceptive coverage mandate imposes a "substantial burden" on the Gilardis free exercise rights, so that strict scrutiny is triggered.  She emphasized that government's arguments that no substantial burden was present turned on the claim that the mandate impacted the corporations, not the individual shareholders. She rejected this, arguing:
If the Gilardis had run their businesses as sole proprietorships, they would presumably have a viable RFRA claim under the government’s theory..... [W]e do not believe Congress intended important statutory rights to turn on the manner in which an individual operates his businesses.
The opinion then concluded that the strict scrutiny standard had not been met, and that there are less restrictive means to achieve the government's interests:
The government cites several concerns to bolster its claim that the contraceptive mandate serves a compelling interest (or interests), but its recitation is sketchy and highly abstract.....  [T]he government does little to demonstrate a nexus between this array of issues and the mandate.
Judge Edwards, in his separate opinion, dissented from the granting of a preliminary injunction because, in his view, the claim that the mandate imposes a "substantial burden" on the Gilardis "is specious." He argued:
The Supreme Court has never applied the Free Exercise Clause to find a substantial burden on a plaintiff’s religious exercise where the plaintiff is not himself required to take or forgo action that violates his religious beliefs, but is merely required to take action that might enable other people to do things that are at odds with the plaintiff’s religious beliefs....
Just as the Government does not directly encourage religion when it provides vouchers that recipients may choose to spend on religious schools, the Gilardis do not directly encourage the use of contraception when they provide insurance coverage that recipients may choose to spend on contraceptives.
He went on to argue that even if the mandate does impose a substantial burden, the government has shown that it is the least restrictive means of furthering a compelling interest. AP reports on the decision. This case has been seen by the Justice Department as the test case for many pending in the D.C. circuit. (See prior posting.) [Thanks to Luke Goodrich and Doug Velardo for the lead.] 

UPDATE: In a press release issued shortly after the decision was handed down, American Center for Law & Justice announced that the corporate entities will petition  the U.S. Supreme Court to grant certiorari on the issue of their separate free exercise rights.

USCIRF Urges Obama To Press Iraqi Prime Minister On Religious Freedom

President Obama meets today in Washington with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. (State Department press briefing.) The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom yesterday released a letter (full text) that it has sent to President Obama urging him to use the occasion to urge Maliki to do more to protect human rights and religious freedom. The letter says in part:
Regrettably, the government of Iraq has been unable to stop sectarian attacks from occurring and often lacks the will to investigate attacks and bring perpetrators to justice. This has created a climate of impunity and a perpetual sense of fear for all religious communities, particularly the smallest ones. The actions of Prime Minister al-Maliki’s government have also exacerbated the feelings of exclusion and discontent among the country’s Sunni population through political marginalization and prosecutions of Sunni leaders.  In addition, the dispute between the central government and Kurdish parties over territory in the north has led to human rights abuses, particularly against the smallest minorities in those areas.

Religious Remarks of Ted Cruz's Father Are Scrutinized

A Mother Jones article yesterday explores at length controversial religious and political statements made by Rafael Cruz, father of Texas' U.S. Senator Ted Cruz. The article argues that the father's remarks are relevant to Ted Cruz's political positions because the Senator brings his father along at campaign stops, refers often to his father, and sometimes deploys his father as a surrogate for campaign events.  In April Rafael Cruz insisted to a Tea Party group that the United States is a Christian nation, and insisted that the Declaration of Independence and Constitution are a "divine revelation from God." In an August 2012 sermon at an Irving, Texas megachurch, the elder Cruz embraced Christian Dominionism and end-of-time transfer of wealth.

New Contraceptive Coverage Suit Stems From Employee Frustration With Obamacare Website

New twists never seem to end in lawsuits challenging the Affordable Care Act contraceptive coverage mandate. The Thomas More Law Center announced that problems with the Healthcare.gov website led to events that caused it to file suit on Wednesday in D.C. federal district court on behalf of an Ohio-based small business, Electrolock, and its Catholic owners, the Williams family:
The Williams Family, who are devout Catholics, object to the HHS mandate requirement that they provide insurance for their employees covering abortifacients, contraception and sterilization....  [I]n an effort to avoid compromising their religious beliefs... the Williams Family initially paid each of their 43 employees several thousand dollars so the employees could purchase their own health insurance through the government Exchanges.
When employees began to have problems with the Exchange website, the Williams Family had to respond to the complaints and the serious concerns of their employees who were facing loss of health care, frustration with the flawed government website, and the decision to look for other employment that did provide healthcare.... 
In a final attempt to provide for their employees in good conscience, the Williams Family has organized a self-insured employee health plan which they are seeking to implement. However, since the plan excludes abortion, sterilization, contraception, abortifacients and related education, the Williams Family requires an injunction from the court in order to implement the plan without penalties, which would exceed $1.5 million dollars per year.

New Limitations Window In Minnesota Has Generated 18 Clergy Abuse Cases

Yesterday's Huffington Post reports that 18 lawsuits have been filed against Catholic clergy in Minnesota since the enactment in May of this year of HF 681 that creates a 3-year window for previously time-barred cases alleging sexual abuse of a minor. A number of these cases also include the archdiocese as a defendant. Prospectively, the new law eliminates any limitation period for suits against individuals who sexually abuse minors, while suits claiming vicarious liability for the abuse must be brought before the victim reaches 24 years of age.

Italian Magazine Claims NSA Intercepted Vatican Communications; NSA Denies Targeting Vatican

As reported by the Huffington Post and Reuters, the Italian magazine Panorama claimed in an article (full text in Italian) on Wednesday that the U.S. National Security Agency's communications intercepts included internal communications at the Vatican and phone calls at the Domus Sanctae Marthae where cardinals lived during the Papal conclave that selected Pope Francis. It says that calls may have been intercepted up to the start of the Conclave.  The magazine also charges that calls about this year's election of the new president of the Vatican Bank were monitored. A Vatican spokesman said: "We don’t know anything about this, and in any case we don’t have any concerns about it." The NSA said that it "does not target the Vatican" and Panorama's claims that it did "are not true."

7th Circuit: Rejection Of Bible Camp's Zoning Requests Did Not Violate RLUIPA or Constitution

In Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center v. Town of Woodboro, Wisconsin, (7th Cir., Oct. 30, 2013), the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected challenges to county land use regulations which prohibit plaintiff from operating a year-round Bible camp on residentially zoned property.  Eagle Cove argued that the regulations violate several portions of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, as well as the 1st and 14th Amendments and the Wisconsin constitution. In rejecting Eagle Cove's RLUIPA "total exclusion" claim, the court held that whatever may be the case as to the Town of Woodboro, there was not total exclusion of recreational camps from the larger area of Oneida County which had ultimate jurisdiction over the zoning request.  More generally, the court said:
RLUIPA is meant to protect religious freedoms from impermissible land use regulations, it is not meant to allow religious exercise to circumvent facially-neutral zoning regulations.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Halloween Still Raises Church-State Concerns In Some Schools

Today is Halloween.  Earlier this week, AP reported on upset parents in some Pennsylvania school districts where Halloween celebrations had been cancelled or scaled back. Schools that have cut back on Halloween cite church-state issues as only one factor.  Some parents object to what they see as religious overtones of witches, demons and ghosts.  But schools are also concerned about security in light of the recent spate of school shootings.  Costumes might disguise a shooter, or parties at which parents are welcome might make schools more accessible to outsiders who pose a danger.  Some schools are also concerned about Halloween cutting into traditional instruction time.  For those who are interested in exploring the mixed origins of Halloween at greater length, the Boston Globe last week reviewed seven books that delve into the topic at great length.

State Legislators Ask Governor To Hold Bill On Tax Exemption for Yeshiva

In New York, the Assembly and Senate sponsors of a bill (S 5658 / A7750) to allow an Orthodox Jewish elementary school in Ramapo to apply retroactively for a property tax exemption are now asking Gov. Andrew Cuomo not to sign the bill.  Yesterday's Lower Hudson Journal News reports that Assemblywoman Ellen Jaffee and state Sen. David Carlucci are having second thoughts because the school is operating in violation of the zoning code and lacks a permanent certificate of occupancy. The school is holding its classes in an converted single-family house and two classroom trailers. The tax exemption bill was passed in June by the state Senate by a vote of 60-3 and by the Assembly by a vote of  136-4.