Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Hindu Nationalists Protest New Indian Coin Design
25th Anniversary of Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms Marked
Monday, April 16, 2007
President Attends Catholic Prayer Breakfast; Supports School Vouchers
Friday afternoon, President Bush further promoted school choice by meeting at the White House with leaders of parochial schools and parents whose children attend Catholic schools. In his remarks after the meeting, he urged expansion to the rest of the nation of the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship program, as well as reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act.
Court Analyzes Elements of RLUIPA vs. Free Exercise Claim
Although both the free exercise clause and RLUIPA protect religious "exercise," each defines religious exercise in a slightly different way. Under RLUIPA, a "religious exercise" is "any exercise of religion, whether or not compelled by, or central to, a system of religious belief."... In other words, RLUIPA protects individual acts of piety, regardless of their centrality. By contrast, the free exercise clause is concerned with the macrocosm of belief: so long as a believer's ability to freely practice his faith (rather than engage in all possible expressions of his faith) is not substantially burdened, the free exercise clause is not violated (hence the requirement that a belief be "central" before it can fall within the ambit of the free exercise clause....(See prior related posting.)
Despite the technical differences between the types of religious exercise protected by each law, courts frequently fail to differentiate between the central practices protected by the free exercise clause and the wider variety of practices protected by statutes such as RLUIPA. The reason for this is fairly apparent. Courts are poorly positioned to decide which religious practices are "central" to any given faith tradition or any given believer; therefore, increasingly free exercise jurisprudence has emphasized deference to individuals' professed beliefs, so long as there is no reason to doubt their sincerity.....
So what, then, is the practical difference between a free exercise claim and a claim arising under RLUIPA? It appears that the answer is "not much," at least insofar as the "substantial burden" requirement is concerned.
Recent Publications On Law & Religion, Church-State
David H. Schraub, When Separation Doesn't Work: The Religion Clauses as Anti Subordination Principles, (Dartmouth Law Journal, Vol. 5, Spring 2007).
Robert Fisher McCarthy, The Incompatibility of Free Speech and Funerals: Proposing a Grayned-Based Justification for Funeral Protest Statutes, (Ohio State Law Journal, Vol. 69, Forthcoming).
From SmartCILP:
Judith D. Fischer & Chloe J. Wallace, God and Caesar in the Twenty-First Century: What Recent Cases Say About Church-State Relations in England and the United States, 18 Florida Journal of International Law 485-515 (2006).
Symposium: Islamic Business and Commercial Law. Articles by Theodore Karasik, Frederic Wehrey, Steven Strom, Shaykh Yusuf Talal DeLorenzo, Ayman H. Abdel-Khaleq, Christopher F. Richardson, Michael J.T. McMillen, Umar F. Moghul, Rushdi Siddiqui, Nazih Hammad, Andreas Junius, Kilian Balz, Robert R. Bianchi, Walid S. Hegazy and Haider Ala Hamoudi. 7 Chicago Journal of International Law 379-622 (2007).
Symposium: Can God and Caesar Coexist? Balancing Religious Freedom and International Law by Robert F. Drinan, S.J., 45 Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 1-114 (2006).
Patrick McKinley Brennan, Harmonizing Plural Societies: The Case of Lasallians, Families, Schools--and the Poor, 45 Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 131-175 (2006).
Thomas J. Paprocki, Presumption As a Matter of Law and Eternal Salvation, 45 Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 177-182 (2006).
Recent Book:
James Serritella, Thomas Berg, Cole Durham, Edward Gaffney, Craig Mousin, eds., Religious Organizations in the United States: A Study of Identity, Liberty and Law, (Carolina Academic Press, 2006).
Broadway Revival Again Focuses Attention on Evolution
Recently Available Prisoner Free Exercise Decisions
In Mayweathers v. Hickman, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95882 (SD CA, Dec. 26, 2006), a California federal Magistrate Judge held that a prisoner's allegation that he was denied his religious diet tray for one week did not allege a substantial burden on his free exercise of religion under RLUIPA.
In Williams v. Dankert, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26975 (ED WI, April 11, 2007), a Wisconsin federal Magistrate Judge rejected a prisoner's RLUIPA claim. Plaintiff alleged only that deprivation of his religious material denied him access to the courts. Thus there was no support for the claim that this was done to prevent him from exercising his religion.
In Ruiz v. Early, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27206 (ED CA, March 28, 2007), a California federal Magistrate Judge found that plaintiff prisoner's general complaints about prison grooming standards did not support a cognizable free exercise claim.
In Moynihan v. Arpaio, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27331 (D AZ, April 11, 2007), an Arizona federal district court dismissed an inmate's claim for failure to exhaust his administrative remedies. One of the claims was that his free exercise rights were vioalted when officials refused to provide him a vegetarian diet.
In Harrison v. Laffin, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27399 (ED LA, March 22, 2007), a Louisiana federal Magistrate Judge recommended dismissal of a prisoner's claim that his free exercise rights were violated when he was unable to attend church because he was in 23-hour lockdown.
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Washington State Mandates Pharmacies Fill All Prescriptions
British Teachers Oppose Expansion Of Faith Schools
IL Proposal On Limitations In Abuse Cases Opposed by Catholic Conference
Report Issued On Blasphemy Cases In Pakistan
School Baord Candidate Says Husband's Suit Will Be Dropped If She Wins
Uzbekistan Blocks Russian Religious News Website
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Turkish Demonstrators Fear Inroads On Secular State
Texas City Council Urges School Prayer
Mojave Desert Cross Case Argued Before 9th Circuit
Church Sues Florida Town Under RLUIPA
U Wisconsin-Superior Settles Suit Brought By Christian Student Group
Portland Archdiocese Reorganization Plan Nears Confirmation
Vatican Envoy Shuns Yom Hashoah Service In Israel Over Pius XII Depiction
Religious Voters and the 2008 Presidential Candidates
Meanwhile, on Friday the McClatchy Newspapers carried an article on religious conservatives "shopping around" for a Republican candidate to back in the Presidential race. Rudolph Giuliani speaks on Tuesday at Pat Robertson’s Regent University, but White evangelical Christians are looking for an alternative. A number of conservatives oppose Giuliani because of his support for abortion rights, gun control, and civil unions between same-sex couples.
Friday, April 13, 2007
NC County Will Fight Prayer Lawsuit
Gideon Bible Case Argued In 8th Circuit
Scalia Keynotes Conference On Religious Freedom
NJ High Schooler Sues To Have "Day of Truth"
Senator Makes Theological Argument for Stem Cell Bill
Based upon my personal struggle with this issue, I now believe any reservations with embryonic stem cell research are misplaced, especially when one truly considers the question of when life begins.An article in yesterday's Bend Bulletin reports on his Senate remarks.
For me, it begins with the mother, with the implantation of the embryo.
I believe the Scriptures provide ample support showing that flesh and spirit become one within a mother. This is one of womankind's supernal gifts. I find verses in the Old and the New Testament, in Genesis, Jeremiah, the Psalms, Job, as well as in the Gospels.
All of these things lead me to feel comfortable with an ethical conclusion that life begins when flesh and spirit are united in a mother's womb and not before.
Jail Chaplain Suspended for Distributing Anti-Muslim Booklets
State Seeking Compromise With Catholic Hospitals On Treating Rape Victims
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Jewish Voter Challenges Nashville's Setting Election For Rosh Hashanah
UPDATE: On Monday, April 16, the Davidson County Election Commission decided to move this fall's runoff election to Tuesday, Sept. 11, instead of the originally scheduled date that coincided with Rosh Hashanah. (Tennessean.com).
Prof Sues NC University For Religious Discrimination
Umbrella Muslim Organization Formed In Germany
Liberal Clergy Support Gay and Lesbian Rights Proposals In State Legislatures
Meanwhile, V. Gene Robinson, the Episcopal Church's only openly gay bishop, testified before a New Hampshire Senate committee in favor of legalizing same-sex civil unions. He said that the bill that would provide equal legal rights to gay and lesbian couples has nothing do to with religious bodies accepting or rejecting such unions. An Associated Press story yesterday quotes Robinson, referring to the desire of gay couples for legal recognition, as saying: ''Would that we could get all heterosexual couples to take these commitments and responsibilities so seriously."
Bankruptcy Judge Threatens San Diego Diocese With Contempt
Yesterday's Washington Post reports that Diocese lead attorney Susan Boswell apologized for misunderstanding how parishes could protect their cash flows, but said: "We are not dealing with a commercial enterprise-- we are dealing with a church. What it does is give money to the parishes. This is not a nefarious function." The San Diego Union-Tribune also reports that Boswell was unaware of Bishop Robert Brom's regularly receiving bank statements for 770 bank accounts of the separate parishes when she told the court otherwise during a March 1 hearing. At an April 11 hearing, bankruptcy Judge Louise DeCarl Adler ordered an external audit of the Diocese.
History Of Jewish Education In NYC Released Time Program Published
Iraqi Women Pressed To Follow Islamic Dress Code
Attorneys Fees Ordered In Auto Sticker Case Settlement
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
U.S. Senate Memorializes Pentecostal Bishop
Missouri House Approves Proposed Prayer Amendment
Upon voter approval, this proposed constitutional amendment guarantees a citizen's First Amendment right to pray and worship in all public areas including schools as long as the activities are voluntary and subject to the same rules and regulations that apply to all other types of speech.Reporting on an earlier preliminary vote of approval on the Resolution last week, the AP quotes Democratic state Representative John Burnett as saying that the proposed amendment is an attempt to increase Republican voter turnout in 2008.
The amendment also reaffirms a citizen's right to choose any religion or no religion at all by prohibiting both the establishment of an official state religion and any state
coercion or endorsement of religion through practices as composing official state prayers.
Public schools receiving state funds are required to display the text of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of the United States in a conspicuous and legible manner.
Pakistan Mosque Creates Islamic Court In Challenge To Government
UPDATE: On Sunday (April 15), 100,000 moderates who support President Gen. Pervez Musharraf rallied in Karachi against the activities of the Red Mosque. (AP).
6th Circuit: Preacher's Injunction Claim Moot; But Damage Claim Can Proceed
British Court Will Consider Legality Of Hindu Funeral Pyres
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Recent Scholarly Articles Of Interest Online
Ian C. Bartrum, The Constitutional Structure of Disestablishment, (NYU Journal of Law and Liberty, Vol. 2, p. 311, 2007).
Rev. John J. Coughlin, O.F.M., Canon Law and Constitutional Law: The First Amendment, Anthropology, Separation, and Neutrality, (Feb. 1, 2007, Notre Dame Law School Legal Studies Research Paper No. 07-24).
Jesse R. Merriam, Finding a Ceiling in a Circular Room: Locke v. Davey, Religious Neutrality, and Federalism, (Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review, Vol. 16, pp. 103-143, 2007).
Kristen A. Carpenter, The Interests of "Peoples" in the Cooperative Management of Sacred Sites, (Tulsa Law Review, Vol. 42, p. 37, 2006).
From NELLCO:
Jeffrey A. Redding, Slicing the American Pie: Federalism and Personal Law, (April 4, 2007, Yale Law School Faculty Scholarship Series, Paper 10).
Indian Penal Officials Bar Easter Mass At Jail Because Of Wine
Easter Rally In Nepal Seeks Easter As Public Holiday
Christian Law School's Grads Increasingly Hired By Justice Department
Celebrity Couple Face Criminal Prosecution In India Over Wedding Rites
Media also reported that Arun's father, Vinod Nayar, has agreed to testify against the couple. Apparently Vinod has disowned his son because of the way Vinod and his wife were treated at the wedding celebrations. If found guilty, Liz and Arun could be fined and sentenced to up to three years in prison.
The complaint against Liz and Arun was initially filed last month, and ITN reported then that the real concern of those filing charges was that the couple had first been married in a Christian ceremony in England, so they were not eligible for a subsequent Hindu wedding. Their attempt to have a Hindu wedding in India as a second ceremony was seen as an attempt to spread Christianity.
Pennsylvania County's No-Smoking Law Impacts Churches
8th Grader's Book Report Creates Church-State Issue
European Court Rules For Scientologists Against Russia
A report by Religion News Service says that the judgment will force other European countries to change policies that do not treat Scientology as favorably as other religions.
Sunday, April 08, 2007
Preliminary Injunction Against U. Wisconsin Clarified
Bills On Religion In Schools Introduced In Texas
Meanwhile, another Texas legislator has introduced the Religious Viewpoint Anti-Discrimination Act (H.B. 3678) into the Texas legislature. OneNewsNow reports that the bill's sponsor, Rep. Charlie Howard, says that the bill is aimed at preventing schools from censoring the religious speech of students. The bill sets out a Model Policy that schools may adopt in order to comply with the bill's provisions.
3 NYPD Officers Fail To Plead That AA Infringed Rights; One Pleads Enough
Recent District and Circuit Court Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Johnson v. Sherman, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24098 (ED CA, April 2, 2007), a California federal district court rejected a Rastafarian prisoner's request for a preliminary injunction to prevent prison officials from requiring him to submit to a tuberculosis skin test. The court found that the state had a compelling interest in requiring the test.
In Thomas v. Montana State Prison, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25088 (D MT, April 4, 2007), a Montana federal district court affirmed a magistrate's decision rejecting the claim of a member of the Asatru Odinist faith that he was denied access to texts, tools and land necessary for religious worship.
In McFarland v. Ellis, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25126 (ED CA, April 3, 2007), a California federal Magistrate Judge permitted a Muslim inmate in a federal prison to proceed with free exercise, equal protection and RLUIPA claims. Plaintiff claimed that he was denied a ceremonial meal to celebrate Eid-ul-Adha (feast of sacrifice), while Jews and Christians were accommodated with special food on their holidays.
In Spratt v. Rhode Island Dept. of Corrections, (1st Cir., April 6, 2007), the U.S. 1st Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court and held that under RLUIPA, Rhode Island had failed to justify its blanket ban on inmates preaching to other inmates. It failed to show that the state's interest in prison security was furthered by the application of the ban to plaintiff who had been preaching in prison for seven years under a prior warden without incident. The Boston Globe on April 7 reported on the decision. (See prior related postings, 1, 2.)
In Safouane v. Fleck, (9th Cir.,March 30, 2007), the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court ruling that a Muslim prisoner's free exercise rights were not infringed when correctional authorities refused to permit her to wear her hijab in jail. Much of the decision, as well as the dissent, focused on other claims in the case.
In Nelson v. Runnels, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25327 (ED CA, March 22, 2007), a California federal Magistrate Judge rejected as too vague a prisoner's allegations of RLUIPA violations. Plaintiff alleged that defendants had denied him access to religious services and threatened him for not complying with the grooming standards.
In Keen v. Noble, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25211 (ED CA, April 4, 2007), a California federal Magistrate Judge recommended dismissal of First Amendment and RLUIPA claims by a prisoner of the Asatru faith. Plaintiff had requested that he be permitted to possess "runestones" as personal religious property and to construct a "hof" in which to conduct religious practices.
Pope Attempts To Re-Christianize Europe
Benedict may be right that the Catholic Church has a world-historic chance to transform Europe and bring about change. But the church's own strictures could work against that. The paradox may be that for all his stylistic softening as pope, Joseph Ratzinger's own labors through the decades, applying his life experience with such rigor to protecting and preserving the church, are precisely what prevent Europeans from reconnecting with their roots. "Think of the silencing of theologian in recent decades," said Father Reese, the former editor of the Jesuit journal America. "The suppression of discussion and debate. How certain issues become litmus tests for orthodoxy and loyalty. All of these make it very difficult to do the very thing Benedict wants...."
Saturday, April 07, 2007
Easter At The White House
The White House Visitor Center features the traditional State Easter Egg Display of eggs decorated by artists from each state and the District of Columbia.
On Monday, the White House will host the annual White House Easter Egg Roll. The event has become increasingly politicized in recent years. CNS News reports that this year again the Family Pride Coalition is organizing lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered parents and their families from all over the country to line up for tickets to the event. Anti-war groups plan to use this year's event to demonstrate against the war in Iraq. While the Easter Egg hunt is taking place on the South Lawn of the White House, the Vineeta Foundation and other groups will be sponsoring "the inaugural annual (Not So) White House Cluster Bomb Hunt" across from the White House at Lafayette Square.
Easter Service At Daley Plaza Raises Church-State Issue
Scholars Analyze Defenders of Sectarian Government Invocations
Article Profiles Alliance Defense Fund
(See prior related posting.)Through its National Litigation Academy, ADF has trained more than 900 lawyers, who commit themselves to performing 450 hours of pro bono legal work "on behalf of the body of Christ." It doles out millions of dollars a year to other Christian Right organizations—many of which are already well endowed—to cover attorneys' fees and costs.
Its three principal goals are protecting the "sanctity of human life" ...; promoting the "traditional family" ...; and ensuring the "religious freedom" of Christians.... Using the propaganda machinery of conservative media outlets and churches, ADF has created a zeitgeist of Christian victimhood....
Two Break-Away Church Cases Make News
UPDATE: Here i s the full opinion in Lamont Community Church v. Lamont Christian Reformed Church, (MI Cir. Ct., April 4, 2007). [Again thanks to Brian Wassom.]
Meanwhile, yesterday's Rocky Mountain News reported that Colorado's largest Episcopal parish-- Grace Church and St. Stephen's in Colorado Springs-- has filed suit in state court asking a judge to declare that Colorado's Episcopal Diocese does not own the assets of the parish. Last month the parish-- upset over liberal rulings of the Episcopal church nationally-- voted to join the Convocation of Anglicans in North America, a missionary diocese affiliated with the Church of Nigeria. The Colorado Diocese than began to inform banks holding accounts of the parish that the break away members of the parish did not own the church's assets. Instead, it claimed, the bank accounts belong to members who remain loyal to the Episcopal Church USA and the Colorado Diocese.
Friday, April 06, 2007
Christian Terrorism Simulation In New Jersey School Outrages ACLJ
ACLJ's letter to school officials argues that the simulation, and particularly the publicity about it, violated the Establishment Clause by targeting and publicly demeaning the Christian religion. The letter demanded a public apology. ACLJ said that no other group in America would tolerate that kind of hostility.
Florida Condo Will Permit Mezuzahs
NY Church Can Rent State Space; But Lawsuit Continues
Texas Legislator Walks Out On Muslim Prayer
Workplace Religious Freedom Act Compromise May Be Evolving
British County Refuses To Fund Easter Cross
Jews for Jesus Win Right To Leaflet In Two Cases
Meanwhile in Los Angeles, a federal judge on Monday issued a preliminary injunction protecting the rights of members of Jews for Jesus to hand out literature in public parks. In Jews for Jesus v. City of Los Angeles, (CD CA, April 2, 2007), the court ordered police to protect Jews for Jesus members who plan to hand out literature outside the Israel Independence Day Festival planned for later this month in Los Angeles' Woodley Park. However, distribution must be at least 10 yards away from the festival entrance. An ADF release discusses the decision.
Former MI State Trooper Says He Cannot Be A Chaplain
Thursday, April 05, 2007
Another City Authorizes A 10 Commandments Monument
Challenge To Faith-Based Jail Program Settled
Mt. Soledad Plaintiff May Not Depose Officials On Legislative Motivations
Court Orders Marine Discharged As Conscientious Objector
Colorado Church's RLUIPA Claim Survives Dismissal Motion
Government Agency May Not Restrict Religious Messages On Employee Bulletin Boards
Church Daycare Zoning Permit Application Remanded
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
7th Circuit: Taxpayer Lacks Standing To Challenge Federal Aid To Boy Scout Jamboree
Elementary School Violated 4th Grader's Speech Rights In Barring Religious Fliers
Church Loses Challenge To Health Inspectors' Visits
Monday, April 02, 2007
President Bush's Passover Message
Recent Articles and Scholarship In Law and Religion
Perry Dane, Exemptions for Religion Contained in Regulatory Statutes" . Encyclopedia of American Civil Liberties, Vol. 1, pp. 559-562 (2006).
Chaim Saiman, Legal Theology: The Turn to Conceptualism in Nineteenth-Century Jewish Law, Villanova Law/Public Policy Research Paper No. 2007-5.
From SmartCILP (mostly):
James Forman Jr., The Rise and Fall of School Vouchers: A Story of Religion, Race, and Politics (Abstract), 54 UCLA Law Review 547-604 (2007).
Kamran Hashemi, Religious Legal Traditions, Muslim States, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child: An Essay on the Relevant UN Documentation, 29 Human Rights Quarterly 194-227 (2007).
Thomas J. Paprocki, Marriage, Same-Sex Relationships, and the Catholic Church, 38 Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 247-264 (2007).
Theresa J. Pulley Radwan, Keeping the Faith: The Rights of Parishioners In Church Reorganizations, 82 Washington Law Review 75-120 (2007).
James A. Sonne, Firing Thoreau: Conscience and At-Will Employment, 9 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor & Employment Law 235-291 (2007).
Gerard V. Bradley, The Blaine Amendment: Harbinger of Secularism?, 8 Engage 138-143 (Feb. 2007).
Church of England Bishop Tests Scope of Employment Equality Regulations
"Bong Hits 4 Jesus" Litigant's Interview Published
I was looking for unusual, hilariously funny, provocative and controversial speech that would not be easily understood but would be wide open to subjective interpretation to anyone that read it. When (the principal) demanded to know the meaning, I told her it could be interpreted as an acronym for "Bring on the national games, head into town for Jesus" — but that was not the meaning. I told her the banner message was never intended to promote drugs or religion but the message was to be interpreted subjectively and a person was free to assign whatever meaning and value to the banner they desired to assign to it, and if someone interpreted it as a religious message or a drug message then that is what the sign meant to them....
My message to the school was clear. "I am asserting my First Amendment free speech rights, there is nothing you should be able to do about it, and I am doing it in front of a national audience," CNN news. The underlying message I believe is quite clear: No one can interfere with my free speech rights and the free expression of my thoughts. I guess I took my Texas spirit and stubbornness with me when I moved to Alaska.
Recent Prisoner Free Excercise Cases
Sample v. Lappin, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21777 (D DC, March 28, 2007), is a D.C. district court case in which a Jewish prisoner claims he should have the right to consume wine on the Sabbath and at a Passover seder. In an earlier decision, the court held that Bureau of Prison regulations substantially burden the inmate's sincerely held religious beliefs, but that the government has a compelling interest in controlling alcohol consumption in prisons. It ordered a trial on whether a complete ban was the least restrictive means to carry out that interest. In this decision the court rejected motions asking it to reconsider various portions of its earlier decision and to dismiss the case as moot or for failure to exhaust administrative remedies.
In Keal v. Washington, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20961 (WD WA, March 23, 2007), a Washington federal district court upheld a Magistrate Judge's recommendations, dismissing a series of claims against a number of correctional officials. The suit by two prisoners challenged denial of a Halal diet, denial of a Muslim sponsor, claims regarding prayer at work, interference with the ability to observe Ramadan, and a prohibition on wearing dreadlocks.
In Smith v. Bruce, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21220 (D KA, March 23, 2007), a Kansas federal district court permitted a prisoner to move ahead with his claim that his free exercise rights were violated when defendants repeatedly served him gelatin containing animal by-products, in violation of his religiously mandated vegetarian diet.
In Porter v. Caruso, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21244 (WD MI, March 26, 2007), a Michigan federal district court, accepting the conclusions of a magistrate judge, permitted an inmate to proceed to trial on his claim that prison authorities violated RLUIPA by barring him from purchasing a replacement ankh cross, which he says is the primary symbol of his practice of the religion of Kemetic Spiritual Science.
In Thompson v. Scott, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21742 (SD TX, March 27, 2007), a Texas federal district court permitted a prisoner to move to trial on his claim that the prison's grooming standards infringed his free exercise rights and his rights under RLUIPA. He alleged that he was forced to cut his hair in violation of his Native American Cherokee-Blackfoot religious traditions.
In Christiansen v. Walker, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22215 (SD IL, March 28, 2007), a Muslim prisoner alleged that the defendants did not provide him a diet or hygiene supplies free of animal products, that they forced him to attend Christian religious programs , and that they did not permit him adequate time or space to observe his prayer rituals and participate in fasting rituals. An Illinois federal district court dismissed claims against three of the defendants because they were not involved in the decision to deny plaintiff religious accommodation. As to the other defendant, the court granted him summary judgment on plaintiff's dietary claims, but not on his other claims.