Wednesday, August 04, 2010

California Federal District Court Strikes Down Proposition 8, The State's Ban On Same-Sex Marriage

In a 138-page opinion today, a federal district court in San Francisco held that California's Proposition 8 that bans same-sex marriage is unconstitutional. In Perry v. Schwarzenegger,(ND CA, Aug. 4, 2010), the court held that

Plaintiffs have demonstrated by overwhelming evidence that Proposition 8 violates their due process and equal protection rights and that they will continue to suffer these constitutional violations until state officials cease enforcement of Proposition 8. California is able to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, as it has already issued 18,000 marriage licenses to same sex couples and has not suffered any demonstrated harm as a result....Because Proposition 8 is unconstitutional under both the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses, the court orders entry of judgment permanently enjoining its enforcement; prohibiting the official defendants from applying or enforcing Proposition 8 and directing the official defendants that all persons under their control or supervision shall not apply or enforce Proposition 8.
In approaching the substantive due process argument, the court said that
the parties do not dispute that the right to marry is fundamental. The question presented here is whether plaintiffs seek to exercise the fundamental right to marry; or, because they are couples of the same sex, whether they seek recognition of a new right.....
The evidence shows that the movement of marriage away from a gendered institution and toward an institution free from state-mandated gender roles reflects an evolution in the understanding of gender rather than a change in marriage. The evidence did not show any historical purpose for excluding same-sex couples from marriage, as states have never required spouses to have an ability or willingness to procreate in order to marry.... Rather, the exclusion exists as an artifact of a time when the genders were seen as having distinct roles in society and in marriage. That time has passed.....
The court concluded that domestic partnerships do not fulfill the state's due process obligation, because they "do not provide the same social meaning as marriage."

Moving to the equal protection issue, the court said:
The evidence at trial shows that gays and lesbians experience discrimination based on unfounded stereotypes and prejudices specific to sexual orientation. Gays and lesbians have historically been targeted for discrimination because of their sexual orientation; that discrimination continues to the present.....
Ultimately the court avoided deciding whether that history of discrimination triggered a strict scrutiny review, because, in its view, Proposition 8 failed even the rational basis test. The court rejected a series of purported justification for treating same-sex couples differently.  It said the evidence showed that same-sex marriage has no adverse effect on society or the institution of marriage and that "tradition alone ... cannot form a rational basis for a law."  Proponents also argued that Proposition 8 protects the First Amendment freedom of those who oppose same-sex marriage. The court responded:
To the extent proponents argue that one of the rights of those morally opposed to same-sex unions is the right to prevent same-sex couples from marrying ..., those individuals’ moral views are an insufficient basis upon which to enact a legislative classification.....
In the absence of a rational basis, what remains of proponents’ case is an inference, amply supported by evidence in the record, that Proposition 8 was premised on the belief that same-sex couples simply are not as good as opposite-sex couples..... Whether that belief is based on moral disapproval of homosexuality, animus towards gays and lesbians or simply a belief that a relationship between a man and a woman is inherently better than a relationship between two men or two women, this belief is not a proper basis on which to legislate..... [M]oral disapproval, without any other asserted state interest,” has never been a rational basis for legislation..... Proposition 8 enacts, without reason, a private moral view that same-sex couples are inferior to opposite-sex couples.

Proponents of Prop 8, Anticipating Loss, File Advance Motion For Stay Pending Appeal

The federal district court for the Northern District of California has announced that it will issue its decision in Perry v. Schwarzenegger-- the challenge to the constituitonality of California's Proposition 8 banning same sex marriage-- today. In anticipation of the decision, yesterday proponents of Proposition 8 (apparently anticipating a loss) filed a Motion for Stay Pending Appeal accompanied by a memorandum in support of the motion. (Full text of filing.) Plaintiffs responded today with a letter (full text) saying they intend to respond if a response is warranted and asked to be heard on the motion. Today's Silicon Valley Mercury News reports on the filing.

Chelsea Clinton's Interfaith Marriage, and Presiding Rabbi, Subject of NYT Articles

Today's New York Times in two articles explores aspects of Chelsea Clinton's interfaith marriage last week end.  One article explores the conflicted feelings in the Jewish community over the marriage-- pride in the societal openness reflected by the marriage, but concern that interfaith marriages undermine the passing on of Jewish tradition. The second article explores the spiritual journey of Rabbi James Ponet, who co-officiated at the wedding. Indifferent about Judaism before college, he became obsessed with religion in college. He studied at Hebrew Union College for the rabbinate, spent eight years in Israel studying and returned to Yale as a deeply observant rabbi. About five years ago, however, he went through another change in which at least his outward observance lessened. He is described as deeply Jewish, but also very interested in other traditions.

New Twist In Rifqa Bary Case; Parents, Girl Disagree Over Cancer Treatment

Yesterday's Columbus Dispatch reports on the latest twist in the case of Rifqa Bary, the 17-year old who ran away from her home in Ohio to Florida last year saying her father threatened to kill her for converting from Islam to Christianity. The parents denied the claim as Rifqa was returned to Ohio but placed in foster care. (See prior posting.) Now it turns out that Rifqa has had a bout with uterine cancer. She underwent surgery, and her physician recommended that it be followed by 45 weeks of chemotherapy even though she is disease-free according to available imaging techniques. Her parents support that recommendation, but Rifqa, who turns 18 next week, opposes that course of treatment, though she will continue to consult her doctors.  Yesterday an Ohio juvenile court magistrate ruled that Rifqa is mature enough to make the treatment decision for herself, and said the court cannot order treatment because Rifqa's health is not in immediate danger. Rifqa's parents claim the decision to end chemotherapy came after Rifqa attended a faith-healing event. Rifqa's attorneys, however, say she went to a "prayer conference" shortly after her diagnosis. She had multiple surgeries and began chemotherapy, but it made her weak and sick.

Former Commissioners Question Dominance of One Church On City's Human Rights Commission

In Sioux City, Iowa, two former members of the city's Human Rights Commission told City Council on Monday that they are concerned about the lack of diversity in membership on the Commission.  Yesterday's Sioux City Journal reports that of the eleven current members of the Commission, 5 are members of Cornerstone World Outreach Church, and one is a former member. The issue arose in connection with Council's approval of the appointment of a new member of the Commission to replace an individual who had resigned. A column in yesterday's Sioux City Journal speculates that World Outreach Church is possibly attempting to "pack" the Commission in order to further its views in sexual orientation discrimination cases that come before the Commission.

Mayor Bloomberg Lauds Religious Liberty While Others Challenge Mosque Decision

Following yesterday's vote by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission that essentially refused to block plans to build a mosque and Islamic Center near Ground Zero, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, in view of the Statue of Liberty and surrounded by religious leaders on Governors' Island, praised the Commission's decision and gave an impassioned defense of the American tradition of religious liberty. Here are some excerpts, but the full text is worth reading:
Of all our precious freedoms, the most important may be the freedom to worship as we wish. And it is a freedom that, even here in a City that is rooted in Dutch tolerance, was hard-won over many years. In the mid-1650s, the small Jewish community living in Lower Manhattan petitioned Dutch Governor Peter Stuyvesant for the right to build a synagogue – and they were turned down. In 1657, when Stuyvesant also prohibited Quakers from holding meetings, a group of non-Quakers in Queens signed the Flushing Remonstrance, a petition in defense of the right of Quakers and others to freely practice their religion..... In the 1700s, even as religious freedom took hold in America, Catholics in New York were effectively prohibited from practicing their religion – and priests could be arrested. Largely as a result, the first Catholic parish in New York City was not established until the 1780's.... 
This morning, the City's Landmark Preservation Commission unanimously voted not to extend landmark status to the building on Park Place where the mosque and community center are planned..... The simple fact is this building is private property, and the owners have a right to use the building as a house of worship. The government has no right whatsoever to deny that right....This nation was founded on the principle that the government must never choose between religions, or favor one over another. The World Trade Center Site will forever hold a special place in our City, in our hearts. But we would be untrue to the best part of ourselves – and who we are as New Yorkers and Americans – if we said 'no' to a mosque in Lower Manhattan.
Meanwhile, the American Center for Law & Justice, which represents a New York firefighter who survived 9-11, announced it would file a petition in state court challenging the Commission's vote as an abuse of discretion.

UPDATE: Here is the full text of the complaint in ACLJ's lawsuit challenging the Commission's decision. The case is Brown v. New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, (Sup. Ct. NY County, filed 8/4/2010).

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

NYC Landmark Board Rejects Landmarking For Controversial Islamic Center Site

New York City's Landmarks Preservation Commission this morning paved the way for construction of a controversial Islamic Center  and mosque two blocks from Ground Zero in lower Manhattan.  According to CNN, the Commission voted 9-0 against landmark status for a building that developers plan to demolish to make room for the planned Center. Opponents of the mosque saw landmark status as a way of preventing the construction because it would have barred developers from demolishing or significantly altering the exterior of the building.  New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other city leaders support the building of the Islamic Center which is designed to show the face of moderate Islam. Some other politicians, however, have turned the proposal into a political issue, calling its location a provocation. (See prior posting.)

Florida Prisons To Begin Kosher Food Program On Trial Basis

JTA reported yesterday that Florida Governor Charlie Crist has recently signed a directive ordering the state Department of Corrections to provide a kosher food plan for state prison inmates.  A release last month from the Aleph Institute, a Chabad group that serves the needs of Jewish prisoners, says it will begin a 6-month trial of the program at a unit of the South Florida Reception Center in Miami. That trial begins August 16. In 2007, the state ended its previous Jewish Dietary Accommodation program in its prisons. (See prior posting.) [Thanks to Joel Katz (Relig. & State in Israel) for the lead.]

Court Says Redacted Holiday Card Form Violated Free Speech

In Pounds v. Katy Independent School District, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77175 (SD TX, July 30, 2010), a Texas federal district court granted a motion to reconsider its earlier decision involving a First Amendment challenge to a holiday card fundraising project at a Texas elementary school. The project permitted parents to order Christmas, Hanukkah or Kwanzaa cards featuring their child's artwork and containing one of a number of pre-set greetings. In sending home the order form supplied by an outside company, the school blacked out one message choice-- a religious quotations from the New Testament. The court held that the school's admitted viewpoint discrimination violated parents' First Amendment free speech rights and was not justified by an attempt to avoid an Establishment Clause violation. It concluded that use of the "unredacted [order] form could not fairly have been characterized as a government endorsement of any of the messages." (See prior related posting.)

Church Sues Challenging Georgia City's Zoning Law

Last month, a church in Avondale Estates, Georgia filed a federal lawsuit challenging both on their face and as applied the city's zoning ordinance which requires churches to obtain a conditional use permit in order to locate anywhere in the city. The ordinance also requires religious institutions to be located on at least 3 acres and have 100 feet of public street frontage. The complaint (full text) in Christ Liberty Family Center v. City of Avondale Estates, Georgia (ND GA, filed July 23, 2010), alleges that the city allows other similar non-religious assembles in four of its districts-- including the central business district where the church leased property -- without requiring this type of permit or imposing the same acreage and frontage requirements. The suit alleges that the ordinance violates RLUIPA, the First and 14th Amendments and the free exercise provisions of the Georgia constitution. Plaintiff has also filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, including a memorandum in support. (Full text). Alliance Defense Fund issued a press release on the case.

Church-State Expert From Now Defunct AJCongress Hired By American Jewish Committee

JTA yesterday reported that following the suspension of activities by the American Jewish Congress, largely for financial reasons (see prior posting), its long-time general counsel and co-executive director, Marc Stern, has been hired by AJCongress' traditional rival, the American Jewish Committee. Stern, who was with AJCongress for 33 years, is known for his expertise on church-state issues as well as on the international law of warfare and other constitutional matters. American Jewish Committee yesterday issued a press release announcing the move. A spokesman said that Stern's hiring has no connection to rumored merger talks between the two groups, and that no merger talks are now going on.

Tajikistan Tries To Keep Control Over Muslim Education

Radio Free Europe today reports on efforts by the government of Tajikistan to keep control over Islamic education in the country. All teachers must be licensed by the state, and the government regularly conducts raids on mosques and private homes where they suspect unlicensed classes are being held or underground madrassahs have been created. Government officials say their actions are aimed at preventing the spread of religious extremism, but they have been widely criticized as violating religious freedom.  Apparently demand for religious classes outstrips the supply of state-approved schools. So the Education Ministry recently introduced a course in Knowledge of Islam into state schools. Religious leaders say these once-a-week classes are not enough. Many parents send their children to unofficial classes in homes of local mullahs and local mosques because they are convenient and free.The country's 20 official madrassahs charge tuition and offer a range of secular courses as well as religious ones.

Canada Orders Investigation After Veiled Women Permittted To Board Plane Without Facial Identification

Canada's Transport Minister John Baird said on Sunday (full text of statement ) that he has ordered an investigation of whether airlines are properly applying the country's Identity Screening Regulations after the media reported widely on a YouTube video showing two veiled women boarding a plane in Montreal without being asked to show their faces.  CTV News (which links to the video) reports that it was posted on YouTube under the caption: "A major Canadian airline risks your safety, pandering to Muslim sensibilities." Many viewers of the clip on YouTube wrote inflammatory comments.

3rd Circuit Says Prison Can Bar Muslim Women Employees From Wearing Khimars

In Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. The Geo Group, Inc., (3d Cir., Aug. 2, 2010), the 3rd Circuit held, in a 2-1 decision, held that a private company which operated a prison under contract with the state did not violate Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act when it refused to accommodate Muslim women employees by allowing them to wear khimars (Muslim scarfs). Geo policy permitted hats or other head coverings only if they were issued with a uniform.  The majority affirmed the grant of summary judgment for Geo, concluding that while this is a close case, the policy should be upheld.  It relied on testimony that the khimar posed a risk because it could be used to smuggle in contraband, it can be used to conceal the identity of the wearer, and it could be used against a prison employee in an attack. Judge Tashima dissented, contending that the majority "makes a shambles of our Title VII religious accommodation jurisprudence." He argued that on the basis of the record, a reasonable jury could find that GEO did not make a good faith effort to reasonably accommodate plaintiffs religious practices. AP yesterday reported on the decision.

Monday, August 02, 2010

Backing of Geert Wilders' Party Is Key To New Coalition Government Agreement In Netherlands

Bloomberg News reports that in the Netherlands, after seven weeks of deadlock, a preliminary agreement to form a government was finally been reached when Geert Wilders' anti-immigrant Freedom Party delegates agreed to back a minority government of Liberals and Christian Democrats.Wilders is known for his anti-Muslim statements and his attempts to limit the influence of Islam in the country. (See prior posting.) Wilders will not hold a ministerial position in the government, and will thus remain free to continue to promote his anti-Islamic views.

Paper Begins Series on the Catholic Church In Cuba

Yesterday's National Catholic Register carries the first in a three-part series on the Catholic Church in Cuba. The Church is the only national institution that functions independently of the government. In the 1960's, the government confiscated Church properties. However in the 1990's the government's attitude toward the Church began to change, culminating in a Papal visit by Pope John Paul.  The article summarizes the situation:  "Since 1998, the regime has alternated between allowing, even endorsing, Catholic expressions of identity and belief and brutally persecuting Christians who ask for more freedom — against the backdrop of a populace mostly concerned with financial survival."

Trial Set To Start In Long-Pending Establishment Clause Challenge To "Waldorf" Schools

Today's Sacramento Bee reports that a federal court trial is scheduled to begin Aug. 31 in a challenge to two Northern California school districts that have created "Waldorf" schools. The lawsuit, originally filed in 1998 has gone through a number of appeals. It alleges that "Waldorf "schools violate the Establishment Clause as well as church-state separation provisions of the California Constitution. Twin Ridges School District opened a Waldorf-inspired charter school in 1995; a Sacramento elementary school was converted to Waldorf Methods in 1996. According to a 1998 press release from People for Legal and Nonsectarian Schools (PLANS), the group which filed the lawsuit:
Waldorf schools were founded in 1919 in Stuttgart, Germany, by Austrian-born New-Age guru Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925). After Steiner's attempt to found a spiritually-oriented political party had failed, he turned to education as a way to carry on his work by preparing souls for reincarnation as the leaders of the next epoch of history. There are now over 500 private Waldorf schools world-wide, including about 150 in the U.S., with philosophical guidance from the international Anthroposophical Society centered in Dornach, Switzerland. In recent years Rudolf Steiner College, a teacher training seminary in Fair Oaks, CA, has led a campaign to establish Waldorf programs in public schools. The charter school movement has accelerated this process.
Parental interest in Waldorf schools is growing, and Sacramento opened a small public high school based on the system three years ago. Proponents say Waldorf is a holistic approach to education that has art infused into the curriculum.

Fired Rastafarian Prison Guards Sue Alleging Discrimination

Saturday's Philadelphia Inquirer reported on a lawsuit filed by three former prison guards who are followers of the Rastafarian faith against Community Education Centers that operates Delaware County's (PA) prison. The guards were fired after they refused for religious reasons to cut their hair, in violation of the prison's grooming policy. The guards argue that they should be allowed to put their hair up in buns, as women correctional officers are permitted to do. Their lawsuit charges religious, sexual and racial discrimination.

Recent Articles of Interest

From SSRN:
From SmartCILP:

Sunday, August 01, 2010

Israeli Government Wants Church of Holy Sepulchre To Pay Water Bills-- But Legal Complications Exist

Asia News reported Friday that in Israel, authorities in Jerusalem want the church of the Holy Sepulchre to begin paying for water that has traditionally been supplied to it without charge and, in addition, to pay for past water usage back to 1967.  Authorities threaten to cut off the church's water supply if  the bills are not paid.  Historically since at least 1917 the British Mandatory Government, the Jordanians and then the Israelis have supplied water to the church free of charge. There are also significant legal issues regarding exactly who is responsible for the bills. While government notices have been sent to "the church of the Holy Sepulchre," no such entity exists. Instead, under a complicated status quo agreement, use of the church is divided among numerous groups. As summarized by Wikipedia: "The primary custodians are the Eastern Orthodox, Armenian Apostolic, and Roman Catholic Churches, with the Greek Orthodox Church having the lion's share. In the 19th century, the Coptic Orthodox, the Ethiopian Orthodox and the Syriac Orthodox acquired lesser responsibilities, which include shrines and other structures within and around the building. Times and places of worship for each community are strictly regulated in common areas." All of this means that if the Israeli government is serious, it will have to reach agreements with the various groups about splitting the cost of water used in the common areas, and will have to install separate water meters in other parts of the building.

Lawsuit Challenges LA's Enforcement of Limits On Pot Dispensaries Against Rastafarian Temple

In Los Angeles, California last week, a state court lawsuit was filed by marijuana activist Ed Forchion (also known as NJWeedman) seeking to prevent the enforcement of the city's recently enacted Ordinance 181069 against his Rastafarian Temple. As described by NORML, the new ordinance seeks to limit the number of legally zoned pot dispensaries to fewer than 100. The complaint (full text) in Liberty Bell Temple II v. City of Los Angeles alleges that Rastafarians smoke marijuana as part of their religious rituals. Earlier this month, Los Angeles police raided Forchion's Rastafarian temple, seized marijuana it found there along with other items, and charged Forchion and Charquant Leyou with violating the Los Angeles Municipal Code. The lawsuit alleges that "The action of enforcement that occurred on July 14, 2010 are [sic.] clear violations of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) 42 U.S.C. 2000bb and the California Constitution's right to Due Process under the law." A press release issued by Forchion yesterday says in part: "I left the restrictive confines of the state of New Jersey to enjoy a new found freedom here in California. Per my now famous Hollywood Hemp Mansion Parties, I have been trying to live a good life and leave behind my days of activism, but this new assault on my rights now leaves me no choice but to legally battle coast to coast!"

Estate of Suicide Victim Sues Catholic Diocese For Negligence

AP reported Friday that the estate of a priest abuse victim who committed suicide has filed a lawsuit in a Pennsylvania state court against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh alleging that the suicide resulted from the diocese ending payments for mental health treatments of the victim.  39-year old Michael Unglo, abused as an altar boy in the 1980's, had attempted suicide twice before. The suit, seeking at least $50,000 in damages, alleges negligence on the part of the diocese which says it has already spent $300,000 for Unglo's treatment. The diocese continus to pay health insurance costs and a stipend for the former priest who has been convicted for molesting another boy.

Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases

In Smith v. Thompson, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74666 (ED KY, July 23, 2010), a Kentucky federal district court rejected a prisoner's free exercise, RLUIPA and other challenges to a prison policy that prevents him from wearing his wedding right that contains stones which are contraband. Plaintiff alleged that he and his wife, as members of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, have entered into holy vows that  prohibit the removal and/or substitution of rings exchanged during their wedding ceremony. Among other things, the court concluded that plaintiff's contentions were not consistent with church doctrine.

In Rodriguez v. Wells, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76764 (SD GA, July 29, 2010), a Georgia federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2010 U.S. Dist LEXIS 76770, June 30, 2010) and dismissed claims by a prisoner that the state prison system should offer kosher meals consistent with Jewish and Muslim dietary restriction. It also held that plaintiff had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies in objecting to being disciplined for boycotting three specific meals as part of a group demonstration. In a related case, Eraso v. Wells, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76762 (SD GA, July 29, 2010), the court also adopted the magistrate's recommendations (2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76760, June 25, 2010) and held that a complaint about lack of kosher food could not properly be raised in a habeas corpus proceeding, and in any case plaintiff had failed to exhaust administrative remedies.

In McCoy v. Frazier, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76702 (ED VA, July 2, 2010), a Virgina federal district judge dismissed an inmate's free exercise challenge to a prison security rule that precludes Muslim prisoners from praying (or otherwise speaking) in Arabic (which their supervisor cannot understand) when the service includes inmates from different housing units and different security levels.

In Allen v. White, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75884 (WD OK, July 27, 2010) a federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75665, April 22, 2010), and denied without prejudice a preliminary injunction to an inmate who wanted a Mesoamerican diet which conforms with his Aztec/Santeria beliefs, as well as ritual items, including incense, drums, animal pelts, and materials to build a fire pit, and certain books that are required by such beliefs. He also sought an injunction to prevent authorities from retaliating against him by transferring him to another institution. The court also denied his request to appoint counsel.

In Funderburk v. Nevens, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75171 (D NV, July 26, 2010), a Nevada federal district court held that prison authorities had adequately accommodated plaintiff's participation in the Ramadan fast by providing pre-dawn and post-sunset meals.

In Jones v. Correctional Care Solutions, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74647 (D SC, July 23, 2010), a South Carolina federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations and dismissed an inmate's objections to the fact that inmates observing Ramadan receive only snacks in addition to the dinner tray rather than an additional full lunch tray as well to eat then.

In Rouser v. Tilton, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74629 (ED CA, July 23, 2010),a California federal magistrate judge in a recommendation to the court rejected claims by a Wiccan inmate regarding various interferences with his ability to practice his religion. Among other things, the opinion held that claims under RLUIPA for monetary damages are not available in personal capacity suits against officials and are barred by the 11th Amendment in official capacity suits.

In Sherman-Bey v. Marshall, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74558 (CD CA, July 22, 2010), a California federal magistrate judge rejected objections by an inmate who is a member of the Moorish Science Temple of America to a prison ban on wearing of red clothing (except in sporting events). Plaintiff wanted to obtain a red fez, while prison rules permitted only white or gray ones. It also rejected complaints that there were no services, separate from Muslim ones, for Moorish Science adherents, and that prison rules permitted only five kinds of scented oils. The decision however granted plaintiff the right to file an amended complaint.

School Conservator's Remark In Firing Principal Did Not Violate Establishment Clause

In Brown v. North Panola School District, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76419 (ND MS, July 28, 2010), the former principal of Como Elementary School in Como, Mississippi challenged on various First Amendment and other grounds her firing by a state Conservator who was appointed to take over the low-performing school district that included the school. The court rejected the argument that a comment the Conservator made when informing plaintiff of her non-renewal as principal violated the Establishment Clause.  The Conservator told plaintiff: "when God moves someone from one place, doors are opened in others and some things happen for the good." The court concluded that this "stray remark" did not amount to the state endorsing the Conservator's religious views.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Methodist Minister, Reform Rabbi Co-Officiate At Clinton-Mezvinsky Wedding

UPI reports on the Rhinebeck, New York wedding earlier this evening of Mark Mezvinsky and Chelsea Clinton, daughter of former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Speculation over the nature of the wedding ceremony that would join together interfaith couple ended as it was announced that Methodist minister William S. Shillady and Rabbi James Ponet co-officiated. Shillady is executive director of the United Methodist City Society. Ponet, a Reform rabbi, is Jewish chaplain at Yale University and heads Yale's Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life. The United Methodist Church leaves the question of mixed-faith ceremonies to local pastors and allows ministers to adapt the wedding ceremony to some extent. (See prior posting.) Reform rabbis may decide as a matter of individual conscience whether or not to officiate at interfaith marriages, though the Reform movement's rabbinical organization opposes participation in mixed marriage ceremonies. (FAQ from Union for Reform Judaism). UPI also reported that the wedding menu included vegan fare for Chelsea Clinton. Of course that would also satisfy concerns of some Jewish participants who observe Kosher dietary laws.

ADL Surprisingly Opposes Islamic Center Near Ground Zero

The New York Times reports that in a surprising move yesterday, the Anti-Defamation League came out in opposition to the proposed building of an Islamic center and mosque two blocks from Ground Zero in lower Manhattan, calling instead for an alternative location to b e found.. (Full text of ADL statement). Supporters of the planned $100 million complex that will contain prayer space, a performing arts center, a pool and a restaurant, see it as an attempt to build a national model of moderate Islam. However, the proposal has become increasingly controversial, especially as Republicans around the country began to use it as a campaign issue.  Sarah Palin has called it an "unnecessary provocation." While the ADL continued to criticize opposition based on religious bigotry, now ADL national director Abraham Foxman says that the location is offensive to families of 9-11 victims. He remarked: "Their anguish entitles them to positions that others would categorize as irrational or bigoted." According to the Times, the ADL's statement could constitute "a turning point in the battle over the project." Among those highly critical of the ADL's new statement is columnist Paul Krugman.

Friday, July 30, 2010

New Jersey Commission Supports More Aid To Non-Public Schools

On July 20, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie released the report of the Governor’s Study Commission on New Jersey’s Nonpublic Schools. Titled Quality Education for All of New Jersey’s Children: The Importance of Supporting the Complementary Relationship Between New Jersey’ s Public and Nonpublic Schools, the report recommends a number of steps to enhance aid to students in private schools, including various tax credits and scholarships. Concluding that its recommendations can be carried out in a manner consistent with case law on aid to religious schools, the  report says:
Between 2004-2009 nonpublic enrollment declined 29,810 – and those students entered the public system at a cost of approximately $430-490 million to the taxpayer this year. Taxpayers cannot sustain the impact of that, proven by the fact that the state budget this year cut from education spending almost that exact amount. That is not a coincidence: it is a consequence.
Yesterday's New Jersey Jewish Standard summarizes the commission's recommendations.

University of Illinois Keeps Catholic Thought Prof At Least For Next Semester

Yesterday's Chronicle of Higher Education reports that the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champlain will retain an adjunct professor who teaches courses on Introduction to Catholicism and Modern Catholic Thought pending completion of a review by a faculty Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure. Earlier the University had indicated it would not keep Kenneth Howell on in a teaching position this fall, apparently in reaction to a student complaint that an e-mail sent by Howell explaining how homosexual conduct would be viewed under natural law theory amounted to hate speech. (See prior posting.) That University decision led to a barrage of e-mails protesting the action. While the University will retain Howell for the coming semester, at the same time it is changing the arrangement under which Howell's $10,000 salary came from the church-supported Newman Center, which also selected instructors who would teach Catholic studies courses.

6th Circuit Denies En Banc Review In Ten Commandments Case

The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday denied en banc review in ACLU of Kentucky v. McCreary County (full text of court order). In the case, a majority of a 6th Circuit panel (see prior posting) approved issuance of a permanent injunction against display of the 10 Commandments along with other historical documents that refer to God in two Kentucky county court houses. In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court found the display violated the Establishment Clause, but later litigation focused on whether the counties had changed their religious purposes for the display. A majority of the panel agreed with the district court that resolutions adopted in 2005 were adopted only as a litigating position. However the panel decision produced three separate opinions. [Thanks to Peter Irons for the lead.]

Swiss Schools Fine Muslim Parents Who Refuse Mixed Swim Classes For Young Girls

Today's Sydney Morning Herald in a story from AFP reports that authorities in Basel, Switzerland have fined five Muslim families that have refused on religious grounds to permit their daughters, all under ten years of age, to attend compulsory mixed-gender swimming classes. The schools offer separate classes for boys and girls who have reached the age of puberty, but the head of the city's education department says that mixed classes for younger children were justified after consultations with religious organizations. Each family was fined 350 Swiss Francs ($335 US).

EEOC Says Store Should Have Accommodated Jehovah's Witness' Beliefs

The Charlotte (NC) Business Journal reports that the EEOC yesterday filed a lawsuit against Belk, Inc. in a North Carolina federal district court charging religious discrimination by one of Belk's stores in Raleigh (NC). The suit alleges that Belk wrongfully fired employee Myra Jones-Abid after she refused to wear a Santa hat and apron while working in the store's gift wrapping section. Jones-Abid is a Jehovah's Witness. Her religion prohibits celebration of holidays, including birthdays and Christmas. The EEOC claims that Belk had an obligation to accommodate Jones-Abid's religious beliefs.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Bangladesh Supreme Court Appellate Division Restores Constitutional Provision On Secularism

The Financial Express reports that on Tuesday, the Appellate Division of Bangladesh's Supreme Court upheld, with certain modifications, a High Court decision that declared illegal the Fifth Amendment to Bangladesh's Constitution. The decision restores various articles of the 1972 Constitution, including those that affirm principles of secularism. According to the Financial Express:
The verdict paves the way for restoration of Article 12 of the original Constitution that says: The principle of secularism shall be realized by the elimination of - (a) communalism in all its forms; (b) the granting by the State of political status in favour of any religion; (c) the abuse of religion for political purposes; (d) any discrimination against, or prosecution of persons practising a particular religion.
The verdict makes way for dropping clause (2) of Article 25 that says the State shall endeavour to consolidate, preserve and strengthen fraternal relations among Muslim countries based on Islamic solidarity.

Following the verdict, Article 38 with proviso will be restored. Article 38 says "Every citizen shall have the right to form associations or unions, subject to any reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interests of morality or public order: "Provided that no persons shall have the right to form, or be a member or otherwise take part in the activities of, any communal or other association or union which in the name or on the basis of any religion has or its object, or pursues, a political purpose."
The Financial Express reports separately that Bangladesh's Parliament has created a 15-member committee to prepare a draft amended Constitution to comply with the Court's order. DNA India reports however that Parliament is unlikely to ban ban religious parties or drop the Islamic verse "Bismillahir Rahmani Rahim" from the preamble of the constitution (See prior related posting.)

Settlement Reached In High Schooler's Suit Against Science Teacher Who Taught Religion In Class

Today's Columbus (OH) Dispatch reports on the settlement of a federal lawsuit brought by the family of a high school student against Mount Vernon, Ohio high school teacher John Freshwater. The lawsuit alleged violations of the Establishment Clause. Copies of the Ten Commandments were posted in Freshwater's classroom. He kept his personal Bible on his desk, and a box of Bibles were stored in the back of the classroom for use by the school's Fellowship of Christian Athletes for which Freshwater served as faculty advisor. The student also alleged a battery growing out of an experiment with a Tesla coil which allegedly left a mark on his arm in the shape of a Christian cross. (See prior posting.) Attorneys for the insurance carrier for the school and teacher have not released details of the settlement, which must still receive court approval. Currently Freshwater is on administrative leave, fighting attempts of the school board to fire him for teaching religion in his science class.

New Zealand Jewish Community Preparing To Sue Over Ban On Kosher Slaughter

JTA today reports that the Jewish community in New Zealand is preparing to file a lawsuit challenging the government's recent decision refusing to exempt kosher slaughter from a new Animal Welfare Slaughter Code that requires animals be stunned before being killed. (See prior posting.) Attempts to convince the Agriculture Minister to reverse the ban have not succeeded. The lawsuit will likely claim that the ban violates religious freedom protected by New Zealand's Bill of Rights Act . The Animal Welfare Act of 1999, Sec. 73, provides that in proposing a Code under the Act, the National Animal Welfare Advisory Committee is to consider, among other things, the requirements of religious and cultural practices.

Atheist School Proposal Welcome Under Britain's New Education Policy

Yesterday's London Telegraph reports that Britain's Education Secretary Michael Grove says he would be interested in looking at proposals by individuals such as atheist Prof. Ricard Dawkins for the creation of a "free thinking" school. Around one-third of the government funded schools in Britain are faith schools. The government has published a plan to give parents' groups, teachers and charities powers to open their own schools at taxpayers' expense. Saying that an atheist school would not be his personal preference, he emphasized that nevertheless it is consistent with the new policy of providing the greatest degree of choice to parents.

Most of University's Speaker Policy Survives Facial Challenge By Christian Preacher

In Sonnier v. Crain, (5th Cir., July 27, 2010), the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals , in a 2-1 decision, rejected a facial challenge to most parts of Louisiana State University's speaker policy, applying the test that a facial challenge will succeed only if there is no set of circumstances under which the policy would be valid. In a suit brought by an itinerant Christian preacher who wanted to deliver a religious message to students, the court upheld the denial of a preliminary injunction to prevent enforcement of (1) the school's seven-day advance notice requirement for a permit; (2) a two-hour, once-per week limitation for each speaker or organization; (3) the collection of personal information before issuing a permit; and (4) the limitation of speech to three specific campus locations. However it enjoined enforcement of the school's requirement that speakers pay a security fee at the discretion of the University.

Judge Dennis dissented arguing that at the preliminary injunction stage, the court should have considered the speech policy as applied as well as the facial challenge to it.  He concluded that all portions of the policy were unconstitutional as applied to plaintiff.  He also argued that the majority used the wrong test in determining facial validity. Finally he concluded that the University's restrictions are not narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest.

77' Cross Goes Up In Texas Subdivision Prayer Garden

Following a settlement last March of a lawsuit attempting to prevent The Coming King Foundation (TCKF) from placing a 77-foot tall cross in a Kerrville, Texas subdivision (see prior posting), on Tuesday the $2 million, 70-ton sculpture was erected overlooking Texas I-10, half way between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. A press release from TCKF says the sculpture called The Empty Cross, which is part of a 23-acre sculpture prayer garden, will be admission free. However, over $2 million still needs to be raised in order to build a parking lot entrance and interior roads that will allow the park to be opened to the public. In the meantime, guided tours are available, as is live streaming video of the Cross.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Court Upholds Dismissal of Counseling Student Who Would Not Counsel Gays

In Ward v. Wilbanks, (ED MI, July 26 2010), a Michigan federal district court upheld Eastern Michigan University's dismissal of a student from its graduate program in counseling because of her objections to counseling clients on their same-sex relationships, in violation of professional counseling standards. Julea Ward's Christian beliefs precluded her from affirming relationships which she believed were inconsistent with Biblical teachings. The court concluded that the university's policy is not a speech code, but is an integral part of the curriculum. It held that in a university setting, restricting or compelling speech that occurs in a classroom as part of the curriculum will be upheld so long as it serves a rational pedagogical purpose. According to the court:
The University had a rational basis for adopting the ACA Code of Ethics into its counseling program, not the least of which was the desire to offer an accredited program. Furthermore, the University had a rational basis for requiring its students to counsel clients without imposing their personal values. In the case of Ms. Ward, the University determined that she would never change her behavior and would consistently refuse to counsel clients on matters with which she was personally opposed due to her religious beliefs - including homosexual relationships. The University offered Ms. Ward the opportunity for a remediation plan, which she rejected. Her refusal to attempt learning to counsel all clients within their own value systems is a failure to complete an academic requirement of the program.
Additionally, the court rejected Ward's free exercise and Establishment Clause claims:
Plaintiff was not required to change her views or religious beliefs; she was required to set them aside in the counselor-client relationship – a neutral, generally applicable expectation of all counselors-to-be under the ACA standard.
It concluded that the program requirements were secular in purpose and effect and did not involve excessive entanglement. It went on:
Although plaintiff’s complaint that defendants demonstrated hostility, arrogance, and offensiveness during the formal and informal reviews is well taken, the court finds that neither this behavior nor the curriculum requirements satisfy the level of hostility required to establish a religion of secularism....
Finally the court rejected plaintiff's equal protection claim:
Both sides’ positions eventually hardened due to the confrontational atmosphere, culminating in the “theological bout” during the formal hearing. Nevertheless, the court does not perceive any maliciousness in defendants’ behavior amounting to a constitutional violation.
Alliance Defense Fund which represented the student said in a release yesterday that it would appeal the decision. (See prior related posting.) Today's Inside Higher Ed reports on the decision.

ACLU FOIA Request Seeks To Uncover FBI "Muslim Mapping"

In a press release yesterday, the ACLU announced coordinated Freedom of Information Act requests in 29  states and the District of Columbia asking the FBI  to release records on its collection and use of information on ethnic-oriented businesses, behaviors, lifestyle characteristics and cultural traditions in communities with concentrated ethnic populations. According to the Los Angeles Daily News, an ACLU staff attorney said that it fears the FBI engaging in "Muslim mapping," the "singling out individuals for investigation, surveillance, and data-gathering based solely on their religion or ethnicity."

9th Circuit Says Ghanaian Baptist Preacher Entitled To Asylum

In Afriyie v. Holder, (9th Cir., July 26, 2010), the 9th Circuit held that a citizen of Ghana should have been granted asylum in the United States based on his persecution in Ghana by private parties who objected to his proselytizing as a Baptist preacher in predominately Muslim areas of the country. Persecution by private parties is a basis for asylum if the government is unable or unwilling to control the persecution. The court concluded that reporting persecution to the government is not essential to demonstrating that the government is unable or unwilling to protect a person from private actors. It is enough to show a lack of police resources that result in the police being unable to provide protection. The court also remanded for further findings appellant's claim for relief under the Convention Against Torture. Courthouse News Service reports on the decision.

Muslim Employees Prevail In Two EEOC Cases Involving Religious Accommodation

Muslim employees of two different companies have obtained favorable results after filing complaints with the EEOC. In one case, according to BNA's Daily Labor Report Monday, Swedish-based Electrolux Group has decided to change the evening shift meal breaks during Ramadan this year so employees will be able to break their fast and still abide by company rules that prohibit food on the production floor.

In an unrelated case, also reported by BNA's Daily Labor Report on Monday, White Lodging Services, Inc. which manages the Louisville (KY) Downtown Marriott has settled a lawsuit brought by the EEOC on behalf of four Muslim women who were denied job interviews in 2005 when they would not remove their hijabs. Marriott dress policy did not allow employees to wear head coverings that were not part of their uniforms, and the housekeeping manager who rejected the women was not aware of the significance of the hijab. The company will pay $10,000 to settle with each of the women, and will provide equal opportunity training for Hotel employees. (EEOC press release, 7/21). [Thanks to Steven H. Sholk for the lead.]

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Utah High Court Reverses FLDS Leader Warren Jeff's Conviction

The Utah Supreme Court today reversed the rape as an accomplice conviction of FLDS leader Warren Jeffs. (See prior posting.)  In State of Utah v. Jeffs, (UT Sup. Ct., July 27, 2010), a unanimous court held that the jury had been improperly instructed on the issue of consent. Jeff's conviction grew out of his role in the compelled marriage of a 14-year old, Elissa Wall,  to her nineteen-year-old first cousin, Allen Steed. Utah law provides that intercourse with a minor is non-consensual where the actor occupied a position of special trust in relation to the victim. The trial court erroneously instructed the jury that this referred to whether Jeffs, the accomplice, occupied a position of trust, instead of whether Steed, the person having intercourse with Wall, occupied such a position. The court also clarified the state of mind requirement in order to convict Jeffs as an accomplice. He must have been aware, at a minimum, of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that his actions would result in rape being committed by another person. And where the charge is aiding another, rather than soliciting, encouraging or commanding the action, the accomplice must have acted intentionally. The Salt Lake Tribune reports on the decision.

UPDATE: AP (7/28) reports that Texas and federal authorities still have charges pending against Jeffs who could now be tried under those indictments. Meanwhile KSL News has Elissa Wall's reaction to the decision. Wall is in a witness protection program.

Canadian Appellate Court Opens Door To Refugee Status For U.S. Conscientious Objector to Iraq War

In Hinzman v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, (Fed. Ct. App., July 6, 2010), Canada's Federal Court of Appeal held than an American soldier's application for permanent residency as a refugee based on "humanitarian and compassionate" grounds may be granted when his refusal to deploy to Iraq was based on a sincere and deeply held moral, political or religious objection to a particular war. In a decision below, the applications judge agreed with the H&C Officer that the CO's potential punishment for desertion in the United States did not justify granting his application because "hardships attached to laws of general application in a democratic state cannot be considered as unusual and undeserved or disproportionate under Canadian law." The appeals court held, however, that "the H&C Officer had the duty to look at all of the appellants’ personal circumstances, including Mr. Hinzman’s beliefs and motivations, before determining if there were sufficient reasons to make a positive H&C decision." Axis of Logic yesterday, reporting on the decision, says that it has "[set] the stage for a new immigration review process for all those Iraq- and Afghanistan-assigned American soldiers who came to Canada as conscientious objectors." However Canada's Minister of  Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney is opposed to allowing American CO's to remain in Canada.

Rabbi Sentenced In Fraud Case From 1980's

In a Manhattan federal court yesterday, Rabbi Avrum Friesel was sentenced to 27 months in jail  and ordered to pay $11 million in restitution for a fraud committed by leaders of the Hasidic village of New Square, New York in the 1980's. Yesterday's New York Post reports that Friesel, after spending eleven years on the run in Israel and Great Britain, plead guilty after being extradited from Britain last year. The offenses included obtaining $10 million in fraudulent Pell grants for ineligible students at a Brooklyn seminary. The court granted a downward departure from the Federal Sentencing Guidelines 41 month sentence because of Friesel's minor role in the fraud and his history of working with disabled children. Friesel said he was deeply ashamed of breaking American civil law, which meant he also broke Jewish religious law. Four co-defendants were convicted in 1999, but their sentences were commuted by President Bill Clinton on his last day in office in 2001. The New York Post notes that the commutation came shortly after Hillary Rodham Clinton won almost every vote in New Square, NY in her race for the U.S. Senate. 

New Jersey Appellate Court Says Religious Belief Does Not Excuse Coerced Sex With Wife

In S.D. v. M.J.R., (NJ Super. Ct. App. Div., July 23, 2010), a New Jersey appellate court held that the trial court should have issued a final restraining order to protect a Muslim woman who had been the victim of her husband's domestic violence. The trial court judge had concluded that while the husband's coerced sex with his wife constituted sexual assault, the husband did not have the requisite sexual intent because of his belief that his religion permitted him to require his wife to comply with his sexual demands. The appellate court held: "Because it is doubtlessly true that the laws defining the crimes of sexual assault and criminal sexual contact are neutral laws of general application, and because defendant knowingly engaged in conduct that violated those laws, the judge erred when he refused to recognize those violations as a basis for a determination that defendant had committed acts of domestic violence."

Tennessee Lt. Gov. Questions Freedom of Religion For Muslims

TPMDC reported yesterday that Tennessee Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey, a candidate in the state's gubernatorial primary (currently running third), suggested in an answer to a question at a campaign event that Islam may not be protected by the Constitution's free exercise clause. Referring to a dispute over a zoning change to permit an Islamic center to be built in Murfreesboro (TN), (background from CNN) he said: "Now, you know, I'm all about freedom of religion. I value the First Amendment as much as I value the Second Amendment as much as I value the Tenth Amendment and on and on and on. But you cross the line when they try to start bringing Sharia Law here to the state of Tennessee -- to the United States. We live under our Constitution and they live under our Constitution." In a rambling answer, he also remarked: "Now, you could even argue whether being a Muslim is actually a religion, or is it a nationality, way of life, cult whatever you want to call it. Now certainly we do protect our religions, but at the same time this is something we are going to have to face."

Monday, July 26, 2010

Russian Prosecutors Open Criminal Prosecution Against Scientology Group

Today's Moscow Times reports that prosecutors in the Russian town of Shchyolkovo, northeast of Moscow, have opened a criminal prosecution against the Church of Scientology on the grounds that it is promoting extremism. The action follows an April decision by a Siberian court that added 28 works by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard to the country's list of extremist material. (See prior posting.)

Battle Over Conversion Law In Israel Takes 6-Month Pause

Today's Jerusalem Post carries an op-ed by Natan Sharansky, chairman of the Jewish Agency, reviewing the battle that has gone on for the past two weeks in the Israeli Knesset over proposed new legislation on conversion.  As reported by the New York Times on Friday, the bill began as an attempt to make conversion to Judaism easier for 300,000 Russian immigrants who came to Israel but are not considered Jewish under Orthodox religious law. The Knesset proposal did this by giving conversion authority to local rabbis around the country. However, when Orthodox authorities objected, the bill was amended to provide that Orthodox Jewish law would be the basis for conversion. That led to massive protests from the Jewish community in the United States who saw this as an attempt to undercut progress in litigation that had been made by the Reform and Conservative movements to have their conversions recognized. As the Knesset adjourned for the summer, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office announced a compromise under which both sides would negotiate for the next six months. Until January, no conversion law will be introduced in the Knesset, and litigation before Israel's Supreme Court by the Reform and Conservative movements will be suspended for the same period.

Reality Show Seeking Progressive Muslim Leader Is Popular In Malaysia

AP reported yesterday on a reality show that is garnering large audiences on an Islamic-themed cable channel in Malaysia. "Imam Muda" (Young Leader) is seeking a pious but progressive young Muslim man who can show that religion can remain relevant to Malaysian young people. The ten men, between 18 and 27, ultimately picked as contestants for the show are photogenic and could pass as models. The contestants are sequestered in a mosque hostel. The tasks they have performed, featured on different episodes, include performing Muslim ablutions on two unclaimed corpses and burying the bodies; and counseling residents of a shelter for women and homeless children. The ultimate winner will receive an all-expense paid pilgrimage to Mecca, an automobile, a position as prayer leader in a major mosque, a scholarship to study in Saudi Arabia and $6400 (US) cash.

Saudi Clerics Say Muslim Women In France Need Not Wear Veil

As France moves to ban the weraing of the burqa and niqab (see prior posting), Saudi Islamic jurisprudence scholar Mohamed al-Nujaimi and Saudi author and cleric Ayed al-Garni say that Muslim women living in France are exempt from the requirement to cover their face. Apparently so are tourists to France, but the clerics say that it is preferable to avoid visiting there and instead go to Muslim countries which permit the niqab. The two clerics are not members of the Saudi Senior Scholars Auhority which has not commented on France's actions. The comments come as the Louvre Museum in France, with the support of the Saudi government, has mounted a major display of Saudi artifacts. These developments were reported Friday by Reuters via Haaretz.

Recent Articles and Book of Interest

From SSRN:
New Book:

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases

In Muhammad v. Sapp, (11th Cir., July 21, 2010), the 11th Circuit denied a Muslim prisoner's objections under RLUIPA to prison authorities requiring him to wear a close-fitting uniform, refusing to let him have a Qibla compass, requiring him to shower in stalls where he could be seen by other inmates and prison officials, refusing to let him to have 16 gold crowns removed from his teeth, and refusing to provide him with a requested diet.

In Fletcher v. Whorton, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71698 (D NV, March 22, 2010), a Nevada federal district court rejected a Wiccan inmate's claim under RLUIPA that his free exercise rights were substantially burdened when a prison refused to construct a sweat lodge for his use and give him access to raw meat for
Wiccan rituals.

In Young v. Smalls, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72061 (SD CA, July 19, 2010), a California federal district court rejected an inmate's request for a kosher diet instead of the "religious vegetarian diet" he was receiving. The court found that plaintiff did not allege his request was tied to a religious belief; instead he thought a kosher meal was more sanitary.

In Giron v. Garcia, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72491 (D NV, July 19, 2010), a federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72490, June 2, 2010) and held that plaintiff had adequately exhausted his administrative remedies in seeking permission to have his prayer blanket.

In Shoucair v. Warren, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72932 (ED MI, July 20, 2010), a Michigan federal district court accepted a magistrate's recommendations (2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72931, May 25, 2010), holding that plaintiff was improperly attempting to force his 8th Amendment claim into a claim under RLUIPA. AT issue was an assault on plaintiff by another inmate because of disagreement between their Muslim and Moorish Science religious groups.

In Wallace v. Miller, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73340 (SD IL, July 20. 2010), an Illinois federal district court denied a preliminary injunction to an inmate who was a Satmar Hasidic Jew, finding that he was unlikely to succeed on the merits in his challenge to various limitations on his ability to practice his religious customs. Various accommodations had already been made, and the other restrictions were reasonable limitations in light of penological interests.

In Howard v. Epps, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72994 (SD MS, July 20, 2010), a Mississippi federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2010 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 73034, March 12, 2010) and dismissed a Rastafarian prisoner's allegations that he was discriminated against because of his dreadlocks and was wrongly informed he could not grow dreadlocks.

In Cotton v. Cate, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73878 (ND CA, July 19, 2010), a California federal district court permitted plaintiff, a member of the Shetaut Neter religion, to proceed with his RLUIPA and equal protection claims alleging that prison authorities failed to furnish him a vegan diet as required by his religious beliefs.

In Scott v. Goodwin, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73610 (WD LA, July 21, 2010), a federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations and dismissed as frivolous a claim by a Muslim prisoner that his First Amendment rights were violated when he was told that he would be confined to his cell for his entire period of imprisonment if he refused to be vaccinated.

In Neal v. Campbell, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74053 (ED CA, July 21,2010), a California federal magistrate judge rejected an inmate's complaint that he was placed in administrative segregation for becoming an "ameer" (a Muslim leader) at the prison, as authorities had previously threatened to do. The court concluded that becoming an ameer was not a central mandate of plaintiff's religion. It also found that defendants have qualified immunity.

DC Circuit OKs "In God We Trust" On U.S. Currency

In a brief opinion last week, the D.C. Circuit in Kidd v. Obama, (DC Cir., July 21, 2010), affirming the district court (see prior posting), held that appellants had not demonstrated that printing the national motto "In God We Trust" on U.S. currency is a violation of the Establishment Clause.

Paper Reports On Growth of Liberty Institute

Today's Dallas Morning News reports on the growth of the Plano, Texas based Liberty Institute since its founding in in 1997. Its budget has increased to $2 million and it has 20 staffers plus volunteer lawyers across the country to help it litigate from a conservative Christian perspective on religious speech, free exercise and other national conservative issues. It became know initially for its litigation to allow students to distribute religious-themed candy cane pens in local schools. (See prior posting.) It also filed suit on behalf of Alaska legislators to attempt to prevent the release of a report that accused former Alaska governor Sarah Palin of abuse of power for her role in the firing of a state trooper. Liberty Institute's president Kelly J. Shackelford sees the group's main target as the ACLU.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

High School Will Not Spend Money To Fight ACLU Over Prayer Banner

Fox News yesterday reported that a Cranson, Rhode Island high school will remove or change the wording on a banner that has hung in its auditorium since 1956 rather than spend the amount that would be necessary to fight church-state objections by the ACLU. The banner features a prayer to "Our Heavenly Father" to grant students the desire to do their best, to be good sports and to be kind and honest and know true friendship. The School Committee plans to discuss the matter with the ACLU to see if they can agree on compromise language.

University Police Officer Files Religious Discrimination Complaint With EEOC

Today's Baltimore Sun reports on an EEOC complaint that has been filed by a Towson University Police Force officer claiming religious discrimination. John David Brown, a convert to Orthodox Judaism, refused to work on his Sabbath from sundown Friday to Sundown Saturday. Brown claims that the University has backed off a settlement reached in 2006 and fired him two years ago rather than accommodate his religious beliefs. The University says Brown failed to show up seven times for work on the Sabbath and Jewish holidays on which the force was too thinly staffed to accommodate his request for time off. The University's disciplinary
board says Brown failed to seek voluntary exchange of days with other officers.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Judge's Handling of Juror Objection To Oath Becomes Primary Election Issue

In Port Angeles,Washington, an incumbent judge's handling of an objection by a juror to being sworn in using the phrase "so help me God" has become an issue in this year's primary election. Today's Peninsula Daily News reports that at a voters' forum, Tim Davis, one of the candidates for Clallam County District Court 1 judge, accused one of his opponents, Judge Rick Porter, of embarrassing Gail Smith, a juror in a DUI trial, by insisting that she include the phrase in the oath. Smith wrote a note to the judge during a break in the trial, saying that swearing in the name of God was like swearing in the name of Santa Claus. When the jurors returned from lunch, Judge Porter had Smith called out of the jury room and questioned her on whether her anger at being sworn in would affect her ability to act as a juror. Smith said it would not. In Washington state, use of the phrase is optional. Judge Porter, who only vaguely recalls the incident, says it did not happen the way Davis charges. He says he apologized to Smith, telling her that it was part of the script and that he did not mean to offend her. Smith however insists that she was embarrassed by being called out and having to sit alone in the jury box, with attorneys and others present, while Judge Porter explained.

French Swim Resort Rules Bar "Burkinis"

With a ban on wearing of burqas in public about to see final passage in France (see prior posting), the London Mail today reports that two Muslim women were ordered out of a swimming pool in the southern French city of Port Leucate for wearing "burkinis". These are swim garments that cover the entire body, including a veil over the head. A regional government official said that the action stemmed from a violation of the vacation resort's own rules that require men and women to wear ordinary swim wear for hygienic reasons. Police were called in when the husband of one of the women threatened the pool's lifeguard with a bowling ball. He eventually backed down, and the couples left the pool with no charges being filed. (see prior related posting.)

New California Poll Probes Views On Same Sex Marriage By Religious Affiliation

On Wednesday, the Public Religion Research Institute released a poll examining religous-based attitudes about same-sex marriage among Californians. (Full text of poll report.) (Full text of questions and percentage responses.) Here are some excerpts from the press release's summary of poll findings:
•If another vote similar to Proposition 8 were held tomorrow, a majority (51%) say they would vote to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry....

• There are major religious groups on both sides of the debate.... Solid majorities of Latino Catholics and white mainline Protestants say they would vote to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry, while solid majorities of white evangelical Protestants, Latino Protestants, and African American Protestants say they would vote to keep same-sex marriage illegal.

• An overwhelming majority of Californians, and majorities of all major religious groups except Latino Protestants, say they both favor laws that would protect gay and lesbian people from job discrimination and favor allowing gay and lesbian people to serve openly in the military (75% and 69% respectively). A majority (56%) of Californians favor adoption rights for same-sex couples.

• .... A majority of Latino Catholics (57%) say they would vote to allow gay and lesbian couple to marry, compared to just 22% of Latino Protestants. The Catholic-Protestant divide in the Latino community is evident across a wide range of public policy issues related to gay and lesbian rights.

• In the wider California religious community, there are also significant Catholic-Protestant differences in the frequency with which each group hears about the issue of homosexuality from their clergy. Protestants are significantly more likely to hear about the issue than Catholics.... Mainline Protestants are the only major religious group that is more likely to hear positive than negative messages about homosexuality from their clergy.

• The messages about homosexuality that Californians hear at their place of worship are correlated with their views on same-sex marriage....

Conservative Groups Want A Piece of Oral Argument On National Day of Prayer

In April, the U.S. Justice Department filed an appeal with the 7th Circuit in Freedom from Religion Foundation v. Obama, a case in which the district court held that the statute creating a National Day of Prayer violates the Establishment Clause. (See prior posting.) Now, however, the Family Research Council and the Liberty Institute which filed an amicus brief on behalf of a number of conservative organization yesterday announced that they have also filed a motion for leave to participate in oral argument. The groups contend that the Justice Department's brief does not go far enough in defending the statute. Family Research Council President Tony Perkins said:
The President's attorneys failed to cite any of the key cases that would require immediate dismissal of this lawsuit because the plaintiffs lack standing to bring it. FRC plans to mount a robust defense of this important national event that a liberal judge has attempted to scrub from the public square.

Graduate Student Sues Over Attempt To Impose Remediation Plan To Change Her LGBT Beliefs

A graduate student in the counseling program at Augusta State University in Georgia filed a civil rights lawsuit Wednesday alleging that her free speech, free exercise, equal protection and due process rights were infringed by conditions imposed on her in order for her to remain in the University's program. The complaint (full text) in Keeton v. Anderson-Wiley, (SD GA, filed 7/21/2010), alleges that the school required student Jennifer Keeton to undergo a remediation program because her Christian beliefs regarding homosexuality are inconsistent with counsellor's' code of ethics and with research that shows that sexual orientation is not a lifestyle or choice, but is a state of being. The faculty claimed that Keeton's beliefs reflect an improper professional disposition toward potential gay and transgender clients. Keeton's attorneys also filed a memorandum in support of her motion for a preliminary injunction (full text). Alliance Defense Fund issued a press release announcing the filing of the case.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Florida Church Will Mark 9/11 With Burning of Qurans

Religion News Service reported yesterday that the Dove World Outreach Center, a non-denominational church in Gainesville, Florida, plans to host an "International Burn A Quran Day" on this year's anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. In response to a Facebook posting, people have been mailing Qurans to the church for it to burn. The church's pastor, Terry Jones, author of a book titled "Islam is the Devil," said that protests are a central purpose of his church. He said the goal is to give Muslims an opportunity to convert. This year, Sept. 11 coincides with the Muslim feast of Eid-al-Fitr.

Court Says Temple's Board Failed To Authorize Borrowings

In Brighton Way, LLC v. Queen Esther's Temple, Inc., (NY Sup. Ct., July 9, 2010), a New York trial court dismissed plaintiff's attempt to recover $140,000 allegedly due under a note from Queen Esther's Temple, a religious organization. The note was secured by a mortgage, and in a prior action the court held the mortgage failed to comply with provisions of the New York Not-For-Profit Corporation Law that requires court approval for a religious corporation to mortgage or sell its property. In that proceeding, the court found the entire transaction highly suspect, suggesting that the individual signing the note profited personally. Following that decision, plaintiff commenced an action to confirm the mortgage and note nunc pro tunc. However the court found no evidence that Board of Trustees of Queen Esther's Temple approved the mortgage or note, or authorized it to be signed by the individual purportedly signing as chairman of the board.

Group Asks IRS To Investigate Campaign E-mail By Non-Profit Religious Group

Americans United announced yesterday that it had sent a letter (full text) to the Internal Revenue Service asking it to investgate a non-profit group "Reclaiming Oklahoma for Christ." The 501(c)(3) group distributed an e-mail urging attendance at a June campaign rally for state Rep. Sally Kern who is running for re-election. The e-mail warned that the campaign pitted Kern, "an outspoken Christian, pro-family representative" against "an individual who has had a sex change operation" who was recruited by the "homosexual lobby" to run against Kern. Non-profit groups are precluded by federal tax law from intervening in partisan political campaigns.

Personhood Amendment Favored In Georgia Republican Primary Straw Poll

WTVM News and a press release from Georgia Right To Life report that in Tuesday's primary election in Georgia, the Republican primary ballot in 47 counties included a non-binding vote on a "personhood" amendment to the state constitution. The question read: "Do you support an amendment to the Georgia state constitution so as to provide that the paramount right to life is vested in each human being from the earliest biological beginning until natural death?" In Butts county, the Democratic primary ballot also contained the same question. The measure passed in every county. The lowest support was in DeKalb County (60%), while the highest support was in Jeff Davis County (92%). Georgia Right To Life plans to use the straw poll results to encourage the legislature to place a Personhood constitutional amendment on the ballot in 2012.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

AJCongress, Leading Church-State Advocate, Suspends Operations After Financial Losses

Today's New York Jewish Week reports that the American Jewish Congress, an advocacy group known for its expertise on church-state issues, has suspended operations due to financial problems. AJCongress lost $21 million of its $24 million endowment in the 2008 Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme. (See prior posting.) The AJCongress demise is also blamed on changes made in the 1990's by Jack Rosen, a successful businessman who served as president of the group. JTA reports that some activities by AJCongress continue with staff hoping that the organization is not totally dead. Controversy surrounds the Board's failure to unrestrict remaining funds to pay AJCongress employees before final layoffs last Thursday. (Forward). An op-ed published last week in the Forward traces the long history of AJCongress, including its leading role in supporting church-state separation in Supreme Court litigation. During the 1950's and 1960's, AJCongress' Leo Pfeffer was the pre-eminent church-state litigation strategist nationally for the Jewish community.

Nigerian Lawsuit Claims Ban on Child Marriage Restricts Muslims' Religious Freedom

In Nigeria earlier this month, the National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons (NAPTIP) forwarded to the Attorney General for possible prosecution its findings that Ahmed Sani Yerima, former governor of Zamfara state and a member of the Nigerian Senate, violated the Nigerian Child Rights Act of 2003 when he married a 13-year old Egyptian girl after paying a very large dowry. (Next 7/21). Now, according to AFP and ThisDay, the Registered Trustees of Supreme Council for Sharia in Nigeria has filed suit in the Federal High Court seeking a declaration that Yerima's right to privacy and his right to practice his religion have been violated by NAPTIP's investigation and planned investigations by the National Human Rights Commission and parliament. The suit alleges that the Child Rights Act is unconstitutional because Muslim religious law permits Yerima to marry up to four wives with no restriction on age. The Sharia group's lawyer says that a Muslim may "even marry a child in the womb of her mother."

Court Refuses To Enjoin Graduation Ceremonies In Church Building

In Does 1, 7, 8 and 9 v. Elmbrook Joint Common School District No. 21, (ED WI, July 19, 2010), a Wisconsin federal district court refused to permanently enjoin a Wisconsin school district from holding graduation ceremonies in a church. The court rejected the claim of unconstitutional coercion, saying: "plaintiffs unease and offense at having to attend graduation ceremonies at the Church and face religious symbols, while in no way minor, is not enough." Responding to plaintiffs' argument that the practice amounted to government endorsement of religion, the court said:
the District's decision to hold graduation ceremonies and the senior honors event in a house of worship holds symbolic force. However, considering the totality of circumstances, the reasonable observer would fairly understand that the District's use of the Church for these events is based on real and practical concerns, and not an impermissible endorsement of religion.
Finally the court also rejected plaintiffs arguments of excessive entanglement and unconstitutional use of taxpayer funds to support religion. (See prior related posting.)

Spain Rejects Broad Ban on Burqa

AP reports that Spain's Parliament on Tuesday defeated a bill that would have banned women from wearing the burqa in any public place. The lower chamber defeated the bill by a vote of 183 no to 162 yes with 2 abstentions. However the ruling Socialist government, whose legislators opposed the total ban, plans to introduce a narrower bill this fall that would merely ban wearing the burqa in government buildings. Mansur Escudero, president of the Islamic Commission of Spain, said he does not know of any Muslim women in Spain who currently wear the burqa on a regular basis.

10th Circuit Makes Minor Changes In RLUIPA Zoning Opinion

On Monday, the 10th Circuit largely denied a petition for a limited panel rehearing in a RLUIPA church zoning case. In Rocky Mountain Christian Church v. Board of County Commissioners of Boulder County, Colorado, (10th Cir., July 19, 2010), the court made two modifications in its original opinion, changing language relating to the propriety of jury instructions. However the outcome of the case remained the same-- the court held that sufficient evidence was presented at trial to justify the jury's determination that the denial of a special use application to Rocky Mountain Christian Church violated the equal terms and unreasonable limitations provisions of RLUIPA. (See prior posting.) Yesterday's Longmont (CO) Times Call reported on the decision.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Germany Plans University Level Programs To Train Muslim Religious Leaders

Today's Chronicle of Higher Education reports on efforts launched in Germany to integrate its large, mostly-Turkish, Muslim population. A key part of the plan is to create a generation of German-trained imams. The German Council of Science and Humanities is creating a group of academic institutes at state-financed colleges to critically examine Islamic theology and teach it in a German university setting to future imams, male and female religious teachers, public intellectuals, scholars and faith-based social workers. The German Muslim community will have a substantial voice in the curriculum and management of the institutes.

Paper Carries Series On Conservative Christian Moves On Education In British Columbia

The Tyee this week is running a 5-part series excerpted from Marci McDonald's The Armegeddon Factor on how the Christian right is building political power in Canada. The articles focus particularly on the central role of British Columbia in the push to move Canada away from a secular public culture. Yesterday's installment focuses on the opposition by evangelical and Catholic parents to the introduction into B.C. schools of an elective course designed to combat homophobia and other bigotry, as well as battles over story books in elementary schools that depict gay families. Today's installment focuses on the rise of private religious schools in B.C. and Alberta, both of which give tuition assistance to children in accredited private schools. Tomorrow the paper will look at the rise of Christian home schooling in the province.

Indonesians Told To Shift Prayer Direction

Due to a mistake by the Indonesian Ulema Council, Indonesia's highest Islamic authority, Muslims in the country have been facing the wrong direction for prayers for several months. Today's New Zealand Herald reports that in March, the Council ruled that Mecca was due west of Indonesia. But that actually had worshippers facing southern Somalia and Kenya. Now the Council has revised its calculations and has ruled that worshippers should face northwest instead. Apparently the original error was caused by the Council acting too hurriedly. A senior Council cleric, however, assured Muslims that their prayers were heard even when they were facing the wrong way.