Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Scientology Denied Restraining Order Against Anonymous Protesters
Craiglist Not Publisher of Discriminatory Classifieds On Its Website
In a statement issued after the decision, the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights said: "While we are of course disappointed with the overall outcome of the case, we are gratified that the Court emphasized in the final paragraph of its decision that landlords and other housing providers who post discriminatory advertisements remain fully liable under the federal fair housing laws." Today's San Francisco Chronicle reports on the decision.
Article Suggests Path For Modern Revival of Shariah
One big reason that Islamist political parties do so well running on a Shariah platform is that their constituents recognize that Shariah once augured a balanced state in which legal rights were respected.... [T]he traditional Islamic constitution rested on a balance of powers between a ruler subject to law and a class of scholars who interpreted and administered that law. The governments of most contemporary majority-Muslim states, however, have lost these features. Rulers govern as if they were above the law, not subject to it, and the scholars who once wielded so much influence are much reduced in status....
In the early 19th century, the Ottoman empire responded to military setbacks with an internal reform movement. The most important reform was the attempt to codify Shariah. This Westernizing process, foreign to the Islamic legal tradition, sought to transform Shariah from a body of doctrines and principles to be discovered by the human efforts of the scholars into a set of rules that could be looked up in a book. Once the law existed in codified form, however, the law itself was able to replace the scholars as the source of authority....
It is possible to imagine the electoral success of Islamist parties putting pressure on executives to satisfy the demand for law-based government embodied in Koranic law. This might bring about a transformation of the judiciary, in which judges would come to think of themselves as agents of the law rather than as agents of the state.
Christian Home School Basketball Tournament Fields Serious Teams
Spain's Muslims Face Hurdles In Acquiring Land For Mosques
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Pressley v. Johnson, (3rd Cir., March 10, 2008), the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed dismissal of a prisoner's claim that his religious materials had been destroyed. The court said that plaintiff failed to elaborate on what religious materials were confiscated or how the destruction infringed his free exercise rights.
In Shabazz v. Barrow, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18130 (MD GA, March 10, 2008), a Georgia federal district court agreed with a federal magistrate's determination that a prison had legitimate penological interests in refusing separate worship services for Nation of Islam inmates.
In Ibrahim v. District of Columbia, (D DC, March 12, 2008), the federal district court for the District of Columbia held that it lacked personal jurisdiction over an individual prison employee who was sued for damages for denying plaintiff his leather kufi that he wears for religious reasons.
In Scott v. California Supreme Court, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19040 (ED CA, March 12, 2008), a California federal district court remanded to a federal magistrate judge a prisoner's complaint that he was not permitted to change his name for religious reasons. The remand was occasioned by the 9th Circuit's intervening rejection of the "centrality of belief" test in Shakur v. Schriro.
In Hill v. Pylant, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19142 (WD LA, Jan. 18, 2008), a Louisiana federal magistrate judge recommended that a Muslim prisoner's free exercise and RLUIPA claims be dismissed as frivolous. Plaintiff sought to have the prison arrange for Islamic clergy with call outs for Islamic prayer, but the court found that there was a lack of available clergy or volunteers. As to an allegation about religious diet, the court said that plaintiff did not allege that he was prevented from observing Islamic dietary practices.
In Harnett v. Barr, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19236 (ND NY, March 10, 2008), a New York federal district court permitted a Muslim inmate to proceed with free exercise and RLUIPA claims. Plaintiff alleged that officials threw away away his Ramadan food during a cell search, that he was denied a "sweet breakfast" at the end of Ramadan, and that he was denied permission to hem his pants above his ankles and to save food in his cell on Mondays and Thursdays.
In Viggers v. Crawford, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19395 (WD MO, March 10, 2008), a Missouri federal district court rejected a magistrate's recommendation to dismiss free exercise and RLUIPA claims brought by a Native American prisoner. The court said that it must determine whether a personalized-length smoking pipe is a central tenant of plaintiff's Native American religion and whether the denial of such a pipe substantially burdens the practice of plaintiff's Native American religion. UPDATE: The magistrate's recommendation is at 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22051 (WD MO, Jan. 31, 2008).
The Sioux Falls (SD) Argus Leader reports on a South Dakota federal magistrate judge's report filed March 5 recommending dismissal of free exercise claims brought by a convicted killer who is an Asatru adherent. After prior litigation, prisoner Darrell Hoadley had been permitted to have a ritual drinking horn, wooden wand and wooden hammer. Now he is seeking additional items, including horse meat and a plastic sword. The court concluded that Hoadley's religious freedom has not been meaningfully curtailed, and that because his security status bars him from group religious activity, he cannot bring a class action on behalf of others. UPDATE: The Argus Leader reports that on March 31 the court dismissed Hoadley's claims, adopting the magistrate's report and recommendations.
Saturday, March 15, 2008
Town Trustee's Suit Over Pledge Refusal Recall Is Dismissed
Friday, March 14, 2008
State Department Releases Report On Global Anti-Semitism
This report ... reflects the United States' deep commitment to take a strong stand against growing anti-Semitism around the world. [It] ... is dedicated to the memory of Tom Lantos.... The report is thematic in nature and ... provides a broad overview of anti-Semitic incidents, discourse and trends. [It] ... documents traditional forms of anti-Semitism ... but also discusses new manifestations ... including instances when criticism of Israel and Zionism crosses the line into anti-Semitism. The report covers anti-Semitism in both government and private media, and within the United Nations system. It concludes with a review of governmental and nongovernmental efforts to combat the problem. The report is meant to serve as a resource for increasing understanding of contemporary forms of anti-Semitism and for shaping strategies to combat this growing problem worldwide.
Columnist Says Islam Is Central In Minnesota Charter School
School Sued Over Denial of Space For Students To Meet To Pray and Talk
Map Discloses State Free Exercise Tests
Violent Demonstrations By Tibetan Monks Seek More Religious Freedom
German Schools Will Offer Course In Islam As Alternative
Wisconsin's Governor Signs Bill On Aid To Sexual Assault Victims
British Town Council Concerned With Propriety of Opening Prayer
Thursday, March 13, 2008
European Court Finds Greece Violated Religious Rights of Bar Applicant
Bangladesh Backs Off Equal Property Rigths For Women After Clerics Protest
Israel's Supreme Court Finds Kibbutz Exception To Sabbath Closing Law
Suit Claims NY State Kosher Inspectors Are Exceeding Their Authority
Second Muslim Elected To Congress
Senate Committee Seeks Information Again From Prosperity Gospel Ministries
California Home School Decision Provokes Strong Reaction
Parents who are homeschooling their children will likely not see any change in current state policies. According to Tuesday's San Diego Union-Tribune, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell has said that the state will not change current policies that allow parents to home school if they file to be a small, private school and hire a credentialed tutor. Alternatively they can enroll their children in an independent study program supervised by an established school. [Thanks to Scott Mange for a lead to some of the material.]
Court Ordered Church Election Dismisses Pastor
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
State Department's Country Report on Human Rights Released
Univeristy Secular Society Revises Constitution In Hopes of Student Funding
Township Officials Sued For Raiding Church and Threatening Prosecution of Rock Band
UPDATE: Here is the full text of the complaint in Faith Baptist Church v. Waterford Township. [Thanks to Brian D. Wassom]
Texas Education Commissioner Seeks AG's Opinion On Bible Courses
Glendon Says Pope Is Intrigued With US Church-State Arrangements
Suit Against Teacher For Anti-Christian Remarks Survives Motion To Dismiss
Turkish Court Says Another Legal Change Is Needed To End Headscarf Ban
New Guide To Tax Rules On Political Activity By Non-Profits Issued
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Audit Shows 2007 Claims and Payouts By Catholic Church In Abuse Cases
WA Passes Bill On Prison Chaplains and Moral Guidance for Prisoners
Imposition of Proposed Land Use Ordinance Held To Be Covered By RLUIPA
The court ruled that the permit had been wrongly denied to Layman Lessons. In the course of an opinion that dealt with a wide range of issues, the court concluded that a city can be vicariously liable under RLUIPA for the actions of its employees. It went on to hold that the attempted imposition of a proposed ordinance that has not yet been enacted is nevertheless the imposition of a land use regulation under RLUIPA. It found that the initial denial of the occupancy permit imposed a substantial burden on Layman Lessons' exercise of religion and violated RLUIPA. The court also found a due process violation in the enforcement of an inapplicable buffer-strip zoning ordinance. The court awarded Layman Lessons nominal damages and attorneys' fees.
No Free Exercise Violation In Police Refusal To Believe AA Members
Court Allows Members To Examine Records of Sikh Temple
California College Rehires Pacifist Teacher
Paper Says Obama's Church Indirectly Endorsed Him In Sermons
Santeria Priest Loses Bid To Sacrifice Animals In City
Monday, March 10, 2008
Cert. To Be Filed In 6th Circuit RLUIPA Case
Survey Finds Most Michigan Localities Open With Christian Prayer
New Articles and Books of Interest
- John M. Finnis, Endorsing Discrimination Between Faiths: A Case of Extreme Speech?, (Oxford Legal Studies Research Paper No. 09/2008, March 2008).
- Chad Flanders, The Possibility of a Secular First Amendment, (Quinnipiac Law Review, Vol. 26, 2008).
- Maxine M. Harrington, The Ever-Expanding Health Care Conscience Clause: The Quest for Immunity in the Struggle Between Professional Duties and Moral Beliefs, 34 Florida State University Law Review 779-833 (2007).
- Panel: Feminist Legal Theory: Dialogue Across Philosophical and Faith Traditions. Participation by Marie A. Failinger, Susan J. Stabile and Eva Feder Kittay. 4 University of St. Thomas Law Journal 405-488 (2007).
- Symposium. Liberty Under Law: 400 Years of Freedom. Addresses by Leroy Rountree Hassell, Sr., Ellis Sandoz and Harold J. Berman; articles by Richard F. Duncan and Ellis Sandoz. 20 Regent University Law Review 1-100 (2007-2008).
- Steven Goldberg, Bleached Faith: The Tragic Cost When Religion is Forced Into the Public Square, (Stanford University Press, 2008).
- Randall Balmer, God in the White House: A History, (Harper-Collins, Jan. 2008). Reviewed by Catholic News Service.
- Allan Lichtman, White Protestant Nation: The Rise of the American Conservative Movement , (Atlantic, 2008).
- Benazir Bhutto, Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy and the West, (Harper Collins, Feb. 2008), reviewed in The Age.
- Deal W. Hudson, Onward, Christian Soldiers: The Growing Political Power of Catholics and Evangelicals in the United States , (Simon & Schuster, March 2008).
Sikhs Like New Vermont Prison Guidelines
Sunday, March 09, 2008
Oregon Coffee House Settles Church-State Dispute With Post Office
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Barnes v. Pierce, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17389 (SD TX, March 5, 2008), a Texas federal district court rejected First Amendment, RLUIPA and equal protection challenges to prison rules that limited medium custody inmates to attending one religious service per week. Muslim prisoners complained that they were unable to attend Wednesday Taleem services.
In Hudson v. Dennehy, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16672 (D MA, March 5, 2008), a Massachusetts federal district court issued a declaratory judgment finding that denyining Nation of Islam prisoners regular Halal meals and denying them closed circuit access to religious services while in the prison's Special Management Unit violates their rights under RLUIPA.
In Paulino v. Department of Corrections, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16551 (ED CA, March 4, 2008), a California federal magistrate judge rejected a Rastafarian prisoner's free exercise claim. Prison regulations called for plaintiff's hair to be cut. He agreed so long as the cut hair could be sent home. However subsequently officials refused to send the hair to his home because under prison regulations it was not personal property and posed a potential health hazard.
In Furnace v. Arceo, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16172 (ND CA, March 3, 2008), a California federal district court rejected free exercise and equal protection claims by a follower of the Shetaut Neter faith who sought a raw food diet. The court found the religion merely teaches that practitions may need to transition to such a diet over time. It also found that prison authorities had legitimate penological objectives in denying the diet.
Afghan Protests Continue Over European Assaults On Symbols of Islam
Is St. Patrick's Day A Secular Holiday?
Saturday, March 08, 2008
Mississippi Court Dismisses Suit Against Diocese By Church That Was Not Rebuilt
Texas Suit Challenging Graduation Prayer Vote Is Settled
Canadian Archbishop Says Deny Communion To Pro-Choice Politicians
Indian River (DE) School District Faces New Charges-- Now By Muslim Family
Naval Academy's Dipping of Flag In Religious Services Questioned
Suit Challenges Room Use Rules In Ohio Library
Friday, March 07, 2008
Appropriation to Religious College Held To Violate Kentucky's Blaine Amendment
Secret Service Tells Sikhs No Kirpans In Meeting With Pope
Arkansas Supreme Court Upholds Judicial Supervision of Buddhist Temple Election
The Pine Bluff (AK) Commercial yesterday reported on the decision. (See prior related posting.)in determining that an election was required under the 1989 bylaws and in supervising that election when the temple members proved incapable of conducting it on their own, the circuit court and its special master did not delve into matters that were essentially religious in nature, but rather applied neutral principles of law concerning election procedures.
Canadian Court Rejects Cycle Helmet Exemption For Turban-Wearing Sikhs
Florida Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Jews For Jesus False Lights Case
Group Asks IRS To Probe Endorsement of Texas Congressional Candidate
Afghan Clerics Want Ban On Indian TV Soap Operas
Thursday, March 06, 2008
California Hospital Issues Veiled Apology To Transgender Patient
Fayetteville Veterans' Hospital Chaplain Speaks Out On Chapel Controversy
Wisconsin D.A. Resisting Enforcement of Premise Registration For Amish
Clergy Privilege Scope At Issue In Molestation Prosecution
Soldier Says Promotion Was Blocked Because of Earlier Free Exercise Claims
Odessa, Texas Bible Curriculum Lawsuit Settled
Court Rejects Establishment Clause Attack on "Good Samaritan" Requirement
House of Lords Votes To Repeal Blasphemy Law; Refuses Appeal In Blasphemy Case
Meanwhile, icWales reported yesterday that a House of Lords Appeal Committee has refused to hear an appeal in the blasphemy case involving the musical Jerry Springer – The Opera. Last year, two High Court judges ruled that the performance did not violate Britain's blasphemy laws. (See prior posting.) The Appeals Committee said that "the petition does not raise an arguable point of law of general public importance ..." Criticizing the denial, Christian Voice, which originally sought to prosecute the case, said: "Apparently Jesus Christ, Mary, the mother of the Lord, and Almighty God may now be ridiculed and insulted on stage and by broadcasters free from the sanctions of the law."
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Maryland Town Debates Policy of Free Water To Churches
Harvard Accommodates Muslim Women In Setting Gym Hours
Illinois House Votes To Eliminate Mandatory Moment of Silence In Schools
Minnesota City Rejects Bond Issuance For Christian School
Vatican To Honor Galileo With Statue
Obama Cites Sermon on Mount In Support of Civil Unions
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Court Holds Several Liable In Challenge To Faith-Based Rehab Placement
Turkish Court Rules That Religion Classes Are Not Compulsory
Ohio Muslims Tend To Support Obama In Primary
Church of England Is Concerned About Proposal To Abolish Blasphemy Laws
UN Report On Religious Freedom In Britain Released
Monday, March 03, 2008
Univeristy of South Carolina Student Organization Funding Challenged
Malaysian Churches Are Entering Politics
Arizona Case Makes Canon Law Relevant To Former Priest's Fraud Defense
Two Courts Are Reviewing Revocation of Property Tax Exemptions
Meanwhile, Friday's Roanoke (VA) Times reported that the Virginia Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal by The Glebe, a Baptist retirement facility, that is attempting to overturn the revocation of its property tax exemption. Last year a state circuit court ruled that the religious and benevolent exemption granted in 1976 by the Virginia legislature to Virginia Baptist Homes applies to land held in the name of VBH only if the specific property is used for religious or benevolent purposes. (See prior posting.) The county contends that The Glebe is a resort for wealthy retirees that provides no charitable or religious services to its residents. VBS says that eventually the facility will offer reduced rates.
Recent Articles and Book of Interest
- Mark Glouberman, Of Mice and Men: God and the Canadian Supreme Court, (Ratio Juris, Vol. 21, Issue 1, pp. 107-124, March 2008).
- Christopher J. Buccafusco, Spiritualism and Will(s) in the Age of Contract, (February 21, 2008).
- Marc O. DeGirolami, The Constitutional Paradox of Religious Learning, (Columbia Law School. Columbia Public Law & Legal Theory Working Papers, February 23, 2008).
- Symposium: A Second-Class Constitutional Right? Free Exercise and the Current State of Religious Freedom in the United States. Opening remarks by Vincent Martin Bonventre; articles by Michael P. Moreland, Gary J. Simson, Luke Meier, Timothy A. Byrnes, Richard A. Hesse and Steven K. Green. 70 Albany Law Review 1399-1472 (2007).
- John M. Breen, The Air in the Balloon: Further Notes on Catholic and Jesuit Identity in Legal Education, 43 Gonzaga Law Review 41-75 (2007/08).
- Nathan A. Forrester Jr., Equal Billing: On Religion, Washington's Views Should Be Considered, Too. (Reviewing Tara Ross & Joseph C. Smith Jr., Under God: George Washington and the Question of Church and State.) 12 Texas Review of Law and Politics 207-221 (2007).
- Mark Strasser, Marriage, Free Exercise, and the Constitution, 26 Law & Inequality 59-108 (2008).
- Willett, Hon. Don R. An Inconvenient Truth: Conservatives Behaving Charitably. (Reviewing Arthur C. Brooks, Who Really Cares: The Surprising Truth About Compassionate Conservatism.) 12 Texas Review of Law & Politics 181-205 (2007).
- Symposium: The Religion Clauses in the 21st Century. Introduction by William P. Marshall, Vivian E. Hamilton and John E. Taylor; articles by Steven G. Gey, Douglas Laycock, Ira C. Lupu, Robert W. Tuttle, Steven K. Green, Kristi L. Bowman, John E. Taylor, Frederick Mark Gedicks, Roger Hendrix, Steven D. Smith, Daniel O. Conkle, Kent Greenawalt, Carl H. Esbeck, Angela C. Carmella, Laura S. Underkuffler, Naomi Cahn, June Carbone, Vivian E. Hamilton and Eduardo M. Penalver. 110 West Virginia Law Review i-vii, 1-544 (2007).
- Martha Nussbaum, Liberty of Conscience, (Basic Books, Feb. 2008), reviewed in the New York Sun and the New York Times. [Updated & corrected].
Pope, New U.S. Ambassador, Exchange Greetings
The Pope, responding (full text) to Glendon's remarks, said in part: "The American people’s historic appreciation of the role of religion in shaping public discourse and in shedding light on the inherent moral dimension of social issues -- a role at times contested in the name of a straitened understanding of political life and public discourse -- is reflected in the efforts of so many of your fellow-citizens and government leaders to ensure legal protection for God’s gift of life from conception to natural death, and the safeguarding of the institution of marriage, acknowledged as a stable union between a man and a woman, and that of the family."
Sunday, March 02, 2008
Do Too Many Churches Hurt Retailing?
Injunction Denied In Land Use Dispute Over Church Social Service Facilities
California Court Finds No Free Exercise Right To Home School Children
Proving Jewish Lineage To Israeli Rabbinate Can Create Problems
decided to "create a place where the representatives of Judaism" aren't government clerks. Itim distributes booklets that explain to Israelis how to arrange a circumcision, marriage or funeral. It helps secular couples find rabbis sensitive to their desires for their ceremonies. For the last five years, it has run a hot line for Israelis who face trouble in the rabbinic bureaucracy. Early on, Farber began receiving calls from people unable to prove they were Jews. Many were immigrants from the former Soviet Union, but some were Americans. Even a letter from an Orthodox rabbi didn't always help. The state rabbinate no longer trusts all Orthodox rabbis.