Monday, March 14, 2011

Recent Articles Of Interest

From SSRN:
From SmartCILP:
  • Angela C. Carmella, Religion-Free Environments in Common Interest Communities, 38 Pepperdine Law Review 57-110 (2010).
  • Derek John Illar, Cyber Fatwas and Classical Islamic Jurisprudence, [Abstract], 27 John Marshall Journal of Computer and Information Law 577-592 (2010).
  • 2010 Editor's Symposium. Freedom of Conscience: Stranger in a Secular Land, 47 San Diego Law Review 899-1129 (2010). (Introduction by Larry Alexander and Steven D. Smith; articles by Kent Greenawalt, Adam J. Kolber, Brian Leiter, Andrew Koppelman, Christopher T. Wonnell, Michael J. Perry, Richard J. Arneson, Nomi Maya Stolzenberg, Michael J. White, Ronald Beiner and Maimon Schwarzschild).
  • Journal of Islamic and Near Eastern Law, Vol. 9, No. 1 (2009-10) has recently appeared. 

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Recent Prisoner Free Excercise Cases

In Miles v. Moore, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21753 (ED VA, March 3, 2011), a Virginia federal district court dismissed a challenge to a prison rule that only allowed changes once each quarter in the list of prisoners who could attend religious services. This delayed plaintiff's restoration to the list after he had been dropped during a period of administrative segregation.

In Pierce v. Gonzales, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21888 (ED CA, Feb. 17, 2011), a California federal magistrate judge dismissed as too vague an inmate's allegations that Muslim inmates were denied religious services for over a year. Plaintiff however was granted leave to file an amended complaint.

In Muhammad v. Wade, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22234 (ED VA, March 2, 2011), a Virginia federal district court rejected a Muslim inmate's claims that his rights were violated when authorities impeded his attempts to set up for classes and prayer, and denied him an Eid-ul-Fitr feast.

In McGovern v. Smith, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22528 (D MT, March 7, 2011), a Montana federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2011 U.S. Dist. Lexis. 23088, Feb. 1, 2011) and dismissed an inmate's challenge that his ability to practice his Wiccan religion were burdened by denying him the use of real candles and confiscating his pendant. However the court refused to dismiss his challenge to the ban on casting spells.

In Pine v. Seally, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23482 (ND NY, Feb. 4, 2011), a New York federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing plaintiffs' claims that that they were denied "'Elder 'Rastafarian' or Eman [sic] 'Muslim' services . . . special diets, the right to Ramadan," and that Jewish inmates were not allowed to celebrate Passover and were not given kosher diets."

Dalai Lama To Transfer His Political Power To Elected Official

AP reports that the Dalai Lama will give up his political role in the Tibetan government-in-exile and will turn that formal role over to an elected leader.  The Dalai Lama said he will propose amendments to the constitution of the government-in-exile at its session that begins this week in Dharmsala, India. An election for a new prime minister for the government-in-exile is also scheduled this month, and that person may be the one to take on the Dalai Lama's political duties.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

New Review of Religious Tolerance At Air Force Academy To Be Undertaken

AP reported yesterday that a retired Air Force general will conduct a review of the religious climate at the U.S. Air Force Academy . The Academy has been at the center of charges of religious intolerance for the past seven years. General Patrick K. Gamble, now president of the University of Alaska, will assemble a team of five or six members to take an "independent, subjective look at the overall climate at USAFA relating to free exercise of religion." The review is designed to evaluate various initiatives undertaken since 2004 that were designed to improve religious tolerance. A lengthy report on issues of religious tolerance at the Academy was issued in 2005. (See prior posting.)

Maryland House Fails To Pass Same Sex Marriage Bill After Religious Opposition

Baptist Press reports that Maryland's House of Delegates yesterday voted to send the pending same-sex marriage bill back to committee after the leadership determined that they lacked the votes to pass it.  The Maryland Senate passed the bill last month (see prior posting), and it was expected that the House would also pass it.  However opposition from predominately black churches, as well as from the Maryland Catholic Conference, meant that the bill was unable to get enough Democratic support. Two members of the black caucus switched from being co-sponsors to opposing the bill. Del. Cheryl Glenn, a member of the black caucus said: "The black churches -- since I've been here -- have never asked us for anything, that I can recall. They are asking now, 'Don't use the word marriage.'" Leaders expect the House will take up the bill again next year.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Defendant's Absence From Trial For Religious Reasons Held To Be Voluntary Waiver

In Eubanks v. Lempke, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23642 (SD NY, Feb. 22, 2011), a New York federal district court denied a habeas corpus petition filed by Isaac Eubanks, a Muslim, who was absent from his state court trial for religious reasons on the Friday when the jury returned with its verdict convicting him of robbery and possession of stolen property. The federal court held that the state court's determination that Eubanks had voluntarily waived his right to be present was not objectively unreasonable. He had attended pre-trial proceedings on other Fridays.  His counsel did not object at trial and the state has a "controlling public interest" in protecting the integrity of jury deliberations.

Chechnya Criticized For Imposing Islamic Dress Code on Women

Human Rights Watch yesterday released a report titled You Dress According to Their Rules: Enforcement of an Islamic Dress Code for Women in Chechnya (full text). Here is a summary from the text of the report:
This report describes violence and threats against women in Chechnya to intimidate them into adhering to a compulsory Islamic dress code. The documented attacks and incidents of harassment took place from June through September 2010, when the virtue campaign in the republic intensified. During that time, dozens of women were subjected to attacks by men, including law enforcement officials, in the center of Grozny, for not wearing a headscarf or for dressing in a manner which these men deemed insufficiently modest. While pressure on women seemed to become less aggressive after September the dress requirement remains a live issue and continues to be backed by high-level officials, including Ramzan Kadyrov.

Interfaith Leaders Criticize House Hearings On Radicalization of Muslims

Twenty-six religious leaders-- Christian, Jewish, Muslim and Sikh-- yesterday issued a statement (full text) criticizing U.S. Rep. Peter King's hearing on the radicalization of American Muslims. The statement reads in part:
We urge the members of our government as well as citizens of good will to refrain from passing judgment on religious or faith groups based on the actions of the few who pervert their spiritual traditions through acts of violence and hostile rhetoric. We believe that politicians, cultural figures and members of the media are never justified in exploiting religious differences in order to advance ideological or political aims. Our leaders in Congress and the Administration must stand up and speak out against these hearings – hearings that perpetuate misrepresentations and harm our country rather than lead it to greater awareness and a strengthened citizenry.
The interfaith coalition-- calling themselves "Shoulder to Shoulder"-- also held a press conference yesterday to criticize the hearings. (Transcript of press conference.)

Fired Nurse Sues Catholic Hospital For Defamation

The San Antonio Express-News reports on a defamation lawsuit against a Catholic hospital that went to trial yesterday in a Bexar County (TX) trial court. Tammy Perez is a devout Catholic who was formerly employed as a nurse by Christus Santa Rosa Health System. She claims that the hospital defamed her in the process of firing her in retaliation for her reporting to officials of the Archdiocese that the hospital had performed an abortion. She prepped the patient for the procedure. The hospital says that the procedure at issue involved a miscarriage, while Perez claims that there had not been an ultrasound to determine if there was still a fetal heart beat. She says the patient told her she had not miscarried. The hospital says they fired Perez because she violated privacy laws by revealing medical information regarding the patient to a priest who was the archdiocesan administrator. Meanwhile, in response to a pre-trial motion, the court ruled that the question of whether an abortion in fact was performed will not be an issue at trial.

House Will Defend DOMA In Court

House Speaker John Boehner announced Wednesday that after consultation with the Bipartisan Leadership Advisory Group, he has directed the House General Counsel to initiate a legal defense of the Defense of Marriage Act.  Boehner had announced last week that he was convening the Advisory Group after the Obama administration decided that it would no longer defend DOMA's constitutionality. (See prior posting.) According to AHN, the Advisory Committee's vote in favor of defending the law was 3-2, along party lines. Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, criticized Boehner's action, saying: "The Republicans' jobs plan is a full employment project for right-wing lawyers bent on defending discrimination." [Thanks to Alliance Alert for the lead.]

Thursday, March 10, 2011

State AG Challenge To Bush Era Conscience Rules Dropped Because of Revisions

A lawsuit filed in 2009 by a coalition of state attorneys general challenging the health care provider conscience rules promulgated by the Bush administration was dropped last week.  According to BNA Daily Report for Executives, the suit originally filed by the Connecticut attorney general and then joined by others was dropped because a Feb. 18, 2011 revision of the rule has rescinded the parts of the rule which the attorneys general found objectionable. The original suit alleged that the 2008 regulation limited women's access to necessary medical services, including emergency contraception.

5th Circuit: Disciplinary Exclusion of High School Student Did Not Violate His Free Exercise Rights

In C.H. II v. Rankin County School District, (5th Cir., March 4, 2011), the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a high school student's claim that his free exercise rights were violated by disciplinary action taken against him in connection with an auto body class.  After the student's misbehavior in the class-- offered by a community college to high school students-- the instructor and the director refused to allow the student to continue in the course unless he received counselling or at least unless he and his father signed an instructor-student contract outlining expected behavior. They refused, citing religious reasons. The court held that the school was merely enforcing a generally applicable rule of discipline against the student and that his constitutional rights were not violated.

U.S. Calls For Egypt To Prosecute Perpetrators In This Week's Muslim-Christian Violence

AFP reports that in Egypt on Tuesday violence broke out between Muslims and Christians in a working class district of Cairo as 1000 Christians protested the burning of a Coptic Christian church last week. Ultimately 13 people-- 7 of them Copts-- were killed in the ensuing fighting, while 140 people were injured. At the regular U.S. State Department press briefing yesterday (full text), spokesman Mark Toner said that the US. was concerned about the violence against Copts. He said: "We have urged the Egyptian transitional government to act swiftly to bring the perpetrators of that violence to justice." Sify paints a more complicated picture of events leading up to the violence, tracing it originally back to what began as a family quarrel over a love affair between a Christian man and a Muslim girl. It chronicles the stoning of cars, mainly by Christians, after four days of peaceful demonstrations over the church burning.

UPDATE: The March 14 Christian Post reports that Egypt's military is funding a project to restore the St. Mina and St. George churches that were burned by a Muslim mob after villagers discovered a romantic relationship between a Christian man and a Muslim woman.

Philadelphia Archdiocese Suspends 21 Accused Priests

In the wake of a February grand jury report criticizing the procedures employed by the Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia in dealing with priests accused of sexually abusing minors (see prior posting), the Archdiocese announced on Tuesday that it has placed 21 priests on leave. Further independent investigations will be undertaken in each case. Eight other priests will remain in their positions after an independent examination of the evidence against them found that no further investigation is warranted. A statement by Cardinal Justin Rigali explained that these actions followed from recommendations by veteran child abuse prosecutor, Gina Maisto Smith, who he enlisted to examine the cases of accused priests and the Archdiocese's procedures for handling allegations of sexual abuse of minors. Rigali concluded: "I wish to express again my sorrow for the sexual abuse of minors committed by any members of the Church, especially clergy. I am truly sorry for the harm done to the victims of sexual abuse, as well as to the members of our community who suffer as a result of this great evil and crime." The New York Times reports that a dozen protesters stood outside Ash Wednesday services in Philadelphia yesterday. One carried a sign urging that the identities of the 21 suspended priests be disclosed.

Chicago Faith-Based Foster Care Agencies Could Lose Funding For Refusing To Place Children With Same-Sex Couples

The Windy City Times reported yesterday that the recent passage of a same-sex civil union law by the state of Illinois (see prior posting) complicates the question of whether to permit faith-based foster care agencies that contract with the state to refuse to place foster children with same-sex couples. The civil union law becomes effective on June 1.  Three faith-based agencies in Chicago that receive $40 million each year from contracts with the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services currently refuse to place children with LGBT couples.  Lutheran Children and Family Services says it will likely change its policy, but Catholic Charities and the Evangelical Child and Family Agency say they will not.

Report Charges Anti-Islamic Bias In Training of Law Enforcement and Security Personnel

Political Research Associates, a progressive think tank, on Tuesday released a report (executive summary ) titled  Manufacturing the Muslim Menace: Private Firms, Public Servants and the Threat to Rights and Security ( full text).  The lengthy report charges that local, state and federal government agencies fail to adequately monitor the quality of preparedness training provided to their law enforcement and domestic security employees by private vendors.  Focusing on three private organizations that offer anti-terrorism training, the report charges:
public servants are regularly presented with misleading, inflammatory, and dangerous information about the nature of the terror threat through highly politicized seminars, industry conferences, trade publications, and electronic media. In place of sound skills training and intelligence briefings, a vocal and influential sub-group of the private counterterrorism training industry markets conspiracy theories about secret jihadi campaigns to replace the U.S. Constitution with Sharia law, and effectively impugns all of Islam—a world religion with 1.3 billion adherents—as inherently violent and even terroristic.
The report also offers seven recommendations to improve the situation in the future.

Minnesota Trial Court Upholds State's Ban on Same-Sex Marriage

On Monday, a Hennepin County, Minnesota state court judge rejected a constitutional challenge to Minnesota's law that bars same-sex marriage. Tuesday's Minneapolis Star Tribune reports that the trial court relied on a 1971 Minnesota Supreme Court decision-- Baker v. Nelson -- which rejected a similar challenge, and also relied on Minnesota's Defense of Marriage Act. The case decided this week was brought by three same-sex couples who had been denied marriage licenses. It claimed that denial of marriage to same-sex couples violated their due process, equal protection, religious freedom and free association rights.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

House Hearing on Radicalization of U.S. Muslims Will Stream Live Thursday Morning

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Peter King's controversial hearing on The Extent of Radicalization in the American Muslim Community and that Community's Response, is scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. EST on Thursday, March 10.  The hearing will be streamed live from this committee website. The list of witnesses has been released. They include 3 members of the House: Michigan's John Dingle, Minnesota's Keith Ellison (the first Muslim member of Congress), and Virginia's Frank Wolf. Others who will testify are: Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser (head of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy); Abdirizak Bihi (Director of the Somali Education and Social Advocacy Center); Melvin Bledsoe; and Los Angeles County Sheriff Leroy Baca.

UPDATE: A video of the hearings is archived on C-Span.

Suit Challenges Ban on Student's Distribution of Church Christmas Party Flyer

Last week, a federal court lawsuit was filed on behalf of a Cresco, Pennsylvania 5th grader who was barred by her school's principal from handing out to fellow students flyers inviting them to a Christmas party sponsored by her church.  The complaint (full text) in K.A. v. Pocono Mountain School District, (MD PA, filed 3/4/2011), alleges that plaintiff's 1st and 14th Amendment rights, as well as her rights under Pennsylvania's Religious Freedom Protection Act, were violated by rules that require school approval of materials from special interest groups and bar student speech that seeks to establish the supremacy of a particular religious denomination or point of view.  The suit alleges that the school has imposed a content-based restriction on the student since school district policies permit other students to distribute literature and invitations during non-instructional time and permit community groups to distribute flyers through a take-home flyer forum and a literature distribution table. It also alleges violation of the student's free exercise rights, vagueness and overbreadth of the school policies and establishment clause and equal protection violations. Alliance Defense Fund issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.

Suit Challenges Zoning Denial For Electronic Bible Verse Sign

On Monday a lawsuit was filed in federal district court against Chichester, New Hampshire by a non-profit organization that displays Christian scriptures on road signs on busy commuter streets. The complaint (full text) in Signs for Jesus v. Town of Chichester, (D NH, filed 3/7/2011), challenges the denial by the town's Planning Board of site plan approval for the display of an electronic message sign carrying Bible verses. The lawsuit alleges that the zoning denial violates the 1st and 14th Amendment rights of plaintiff, as well as the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. Alliance Defense Fund issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.

Vatican UN Representative Encourages Religious Freedom

Zenit reports on the address on religious freedom given last week at the United Nations Human Rights Council by Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, permanent representative of the Holy See to the U.N. offices in Geneva. Citing a study that says 75% of those killed because of religious hatred are Christians, Tomasi urged that states have a responsibility to create an environment that encourages religious freedom. He also said that the practice of religion needs to be defined broadly-- it includes more than just acts of worship.

Canadian Town's Public Schools-- All Catholic-- Do Not Offer Secular Alternative

All the schools in the Canadian town of Morinville, Alberta (near Edmonton) are government supported Catholic schools. Yesterday's Toronto Globe and Mail reports that some parent are complaining about the lack of a secular alternative.  Alberta law permits parents to take their children out of religion classes. However parents say religion permeates the entire curriculum of the schools. Provincial Education Minister Dave Hancock says he will meet with the Greater St. Albert Catholic Regional Division that runs the schools to encourage them to find a solution so parents that want a secular education for their children can obtain it.

British Tribunal Rules Anti-Hunting Beliefs Protected Under Employment Discrimination Regulations

Britain's  Employment Equality (Religion or Belief) Regulations 2003 (Sec. 2) include "philosophical belief" in the definition of religion or belief. Yesterday's London Telegraph reports that an employment tribunal judge has ruled that the anti-hunting view of activist Joe Hashman are protected under the law's employment discrimination prohibitions.  Hashman secretly filmed celebrity chef Clarissa Dickson Wright attending an illegal rabbit hunting event. He was fired by the owners of the garden center at which he worked. The owners are hunting fans.  Hashman sued and an employment tribunal judge ruled that Hashman's deeply held beliefs about the environment, animal rights, veganism and opposition to hunting are protected as under the religion or belief regulations. Hashman's employers claim he was fired for other reasons. (See prior related posting.)

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Kentucky Appeals Court Upholds Billboard Limits Applied To Religious Messages

In Harston v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (KY App., March 4, 2011), the Kentucky Court of Appeals upheld the application of the permit requirements of Kentucky's Billboard Advertising Act to several billboards carrying religious messages that were placed within 660 feet of an Interstate highway. The court rejected the argument that the signs come under the statute's exception for advertising of on-premise activities.  Petitioners contended that the exception applies "because the signs promote Christianity which is occurring on the family farms where the signs are located." The court also rejected petitioners' challenge under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, finding that the Act promotes a compelling governmental interest using the least restrictive means. (See prior related posting.)

EEOC Sues Over Failure To Accommodate Sabbath Observance of Job Applicant

The EEOC announced last week that it has filed a Title VII employment discrimination suit against Convergys Corp. ewhich refused to hire a member of the Hebrew Israelite faith who was unable to work on his Sabbath.  The EEOC says the company should be able to accommodate applicant Shannon Fantroy's request not to work from sunup to sundown on Saturday since he would be woking at a large call center. An EEOC regional attorney said: "Refusing to hire a person in this situation without even discussing a possible accommodation for his religion is unlawful discrimination."

Suit Charges University of California With Tolerating Dangerous Anti-Semitic Climate

Today's Daily Californian reports on a lawsuit filed in a California federal district court by a UC Berkeley graduate against Berkeley and the University system over a series of anti-Semitic incidents.  The lawsuit was filed by Jessica Felber who was co-president of Tikvah, the campus Zionist group. The suit says she was assaulted last year by Husam Zakharia, a Berkeley alumnus who was a member of Students for Justice in Palestine.  Zakharia was arrested but never charged in the incident. Felber's complaint says that a number of incidents over the past ten years have led to a dangerous anti-Semitic climate on UC campuses and that the UC system has failed to adopt policies to address the problem.  UC says the charges are unfounded while Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) call the suit an assault on free speech. The suit comes as SJP begins its "Israel Apartheid Week" on campus.

UPDATE: Here is the First Amended Complaint in the case, filed May 19, 2011.

Students Protest Removal of 10 Commandments From Schools

In response to the decision taken last month by the Giles County, Virginia school board to remove copies of the Ten Commandments that had hung in the county's schools for many years (see prior posting), 200 high school students staged a protest.  WDBJ News reports that yesterday the students marched out of Giles High School where they were met by parents and community leaders. Together the group prayed for a return of the Ten Commandment displays. One students said: "This is America and we can have our Ten Commandments and if they don't like it, they can get out." Another protested: "It's our choice to have the Ten Commandments. It's not the law's choice or anything, it's not the state’s choice or anything. It’s Giles County’s choice. It’s the kid’s choice." Freedom from Religion Foundation which had originally complained about the displays responded: "It is not only unconstitutional to post one religion's edicts on the walls of public schools, but it is bad manners."

Cert. Denied In Challenge To "In God We Trust" Motto

The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday denied review in Newdow v. Lefevre, (Docket No. 10-893, cert. denied 3/7/2011). (Order List.) In the case, the 9th Circuit rejected an Establishment Clause challenge to the inscription of "In God We Trust" on U.S. coins and currency. It also rejected rejected on standing grounds plaintiff Michael Newdow's broader claim that the mere adoption of "In God We Trust" as the national motto was unconstitutional. (See prior posting.) The San Francisco Chronicle, reporting on the Supreme Court's action, quoted plaintiff Michael Newdow who said he would now refile the suit elsewhere.

Monday, March 07, 2011

Supreme Court Denies Review In Student Organization Funding Case

The U.S. Supreme Court today denied certiorari in Walsh v. Badger Catholic, Inc., (Docket No. 10-731, cert. denied 3/7/2011). (Order List). In the case, the 7th Circuit in a 2-1 decision invalidated a University of Wisconsin policy that withheld student activity fee funding for worship, proselytizing or religious instruction by recognized student groups. (See prior posting.)

In a related development, last month Indiana University changed its policy that denied Student Association funding for religiously based student groups. The Indiana Daily Student last week reported that the change in policy came in connection with an application by Impact Movement for funds for its members to attend a national conference which would involve religious proselytizing and sectarian activities.

Montana Supreme Court Stays Order Requiring Surgery Over Woman's Religious Objections

The Montana Supreme Court last week ordered a stay and expedited appeal of a trial court's order that a woman with cancer undergo surgery despite her religious objections. In Office of State Public Defender on Behalf of L.K. v. Montana Fourth Judicial District Court, (MT Sup. Ct., March 2, 2011), the Supreme Court explained:

During a hearing conducted on March 1, 2011, the District Court determined that L.K. is not competent to make her own medical decisions and directed that she undergo a radical hysterectomy on March 3, 2011, against her desires. L.K. objects to the surgery on religious grounds, and expert testimony admitted at the hearing indicated that her religious objections are delusional.
Reporting on the case today, the Helena Independent Record says that at trial a doctor and a psychiatrist testified that L.K. believed that God had cured her.  Doctors say the woman's cancer could kill her within three years. L.K. testified however that she understands she had been diagnosed with cancer and understands the risks of death if she does not have the surgery. The appeal will argue that the trial court's order violates L.K.'s constitutionally protected rights of personal autonomy and religious freedom.

White House Advisor Reassures US Muslims In Advance of Congressional Hearing on Radicalization

In advance of Thursday's scheduled hearings by the House Homeland Security Committee chairman Pete King (R-NY) on radicalization of American Muslims (see prior posting), the White House is seeking to reassure Muslims.  The New York Times reports that Dennis McDonough, White House deputy national security adviser, yesterday delivered an important speech at the All Dulles Area Muslim Society (the Adams Center) in Sterling, Virginia. McDonough spoke out against stigmatizing an entire community because of the actions of a few and said: "In the United States, we don't practice guilt by association." He told the audience: "When it comes to preventing violent extremism and terrorism in the United States, Muslim Americans are not part of the problem, you’re part of the solution." While angry about the hearings, leaders of mainstream mosques plan to participate to testify about their cooperation with law enforcement officials. Minnesota Rep. Kieth Ellison, the only Muslim in Congress, said he would testify even though he thinks it wrong for Congress to investigate a particular religious group.

Recent Articles Of Interest

From SSRN:
From Bepress:

Sunday, March 06, 2011

Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases

In Brown v. Secretary, Department of Corrections, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19207 (MD FL, Feb. 25, 2011), a Florida federal district court rejected an inmate's free exercise and equal protection challenges to the failure to provide services for Nation of Islam inmates separate from Muslim services.

In Paliotta v. Brooks, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19381 (D NV., Feb. 25, 2011), a Nevada federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendation (2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18943, Feb. 3, 2011) and dismissed on claim preclusion grounds an inmate's complaint that those housed in administrative segregation do not have equal access to religious services and religious property.

In Robinson v. Delgado, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21218 (ND CA, Feb. 17, 2011), a California federal magistrate judge ordered the award of $220,791 in attorneys' fees and $47,482 in costs in a case in which an inmate who had become a member of the House of Yahweh Yadhaim obtained an injunction ordering prison authorities to permit him to participate in the prison's Jewish kosher meal program-- even though he is not Jewish.  The kosher meals satisfied plaintiff's religious dietary requirements.

2011 White House Easter Egg Roll Set

The White House announced Friday that this year's White House Easter Egg Roll will be held on April 25.  The theme will be "Get Up and Go!"  Activities will encourage children to lead a healthy and active life style. Tickets will be distributed through an online lottery system to children 12 and under and their families. According to Recreation.gov:
Originally young children in Washington, D.C. would flock to Capitol Hill every Monday after Easter for egg rolling and a day of activities. Members of Congress grew tired of the growing crowds and passed an Act of Congress which prohibited egg rolling on the Capitol grounds. The event was moved to the White House in 1878 after President Hayes was approached by young children to use his backyard to roll eggs. Nearly every Easter since, the White House has invited young children to roll eggs on the White House lawn. Today, the Easter Egg Roll is the largest public event held at the White House.

Saturday, March 05, 2011

Church Dispute Dismissed To Keep Court Out of Deciding Church Doctrine and Governance

In Retta v. Mekonnen, (TX App., March 3, 2011), the Texas Court of Appeals dissolved a temporary injunction that had been issued by a Dallas trial court. The appeals court concluded that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to issue the injunction because the dispute requires the determination of religious doctrine and church governance. At issue was an amendment to the bylaws of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Debre Meheret St. Michael's Church in Dallas adopted by its trustees providing that a $30 per month contribution was required to retain membership.  Individuals who were disqualified from membership under the new bylaw sued claiming that the trustees who adopted the new bylaw had not been properly elected.  At plaintiff's request, the trial court had issued an injunction ordering church trustees (1) not to prohibit anyone from entering the church and peaceably participating in worship services; (2) not to forcibly remove anyone from services without first asking them to leave; (3) to limit those asked to leave to anyone causing an actual disruption of services; and (4) to preserve church records, documents and recordings.

UPDATE: A similar result was reached in a case involving the same defendants, but different plaintiffs, asserting similar claims. Fesseha v. Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Dere Neheret St. Michael's Church in Dallas, (TX App., July 12, 2011).

Speaker Moves To Have House of Representatives Defend DOMA In Court

House Speaker John Boehner announced Friday that he was taking steps to have the House of Representatives intervene to defend the Defense of Marriage Act now that the President and the Attorney General have said that the Administration will not defend its constitutionality in court. (See prior posting.)  Boehner said he will convene the 5-member Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group which has the authority to instruct the House General Counsel to take legal action on behalf of the House. The New York Times yesterday reported on Boehner's action.

Friday, March 04, 2011

Clergy Group Supports Proposed Colorado Civil Unions Bill

With the first hearings set for Monday in the Colorado Senate on Senate Bill 172 that would permit same-sex civil unions, a group of 130 clergy have announced their support for the bill. A KWGN News report yesterday quotes Rabbi Joe Black, one of three leaders from different faiths representing the bill's supporters, who said:
You're going to be hearing opposition to this bill from faith communities. And we just wanted you to know that that's not the only voice that is out there.... For too long the loudest voice from the religious community in regard to GLBT community has been that of condemenation and denunciation -- and that needs to change.
United Methodist Rev. Kerry Greenhill echoed those sentiments, saying: "God loves all people equally as children of God. It is not a sin to be GLBT." The bill, while permitting civil unions, provides that no member of the clergy is required to certify a civil union in violation of their free exercise of religion and no child placement agency is required to place a child for adoption with a couple that has entered a civil union.

Indonesian Provinces Place New Restrictions on Ahmadiyah

In Indonesia, the governor of the province of West Java yesterday issued a gubernatorial regulation (No. 12 of 2011) banning all public activities by the 17,000 members of the Ahmadiyah sect in the province.  Today's Jakarta Globe reports that the action is seen as implementing an Indonesian 2008 joint ministerial decree that bars the Ahmadiyah from spreading their faith. (See prior posting.) The West Java regulation prohibits the Amidaiyah from spreading their beliefs orally, in writing or through electronic media. It requires that all signs identifying mosques, schools or other facilities as Ahmadiyah be taken down. Ahmadiyah mosques are declared as mosques open to all Muslims and religious authorities will organize Muslim events at the mosques. However the regulation also prohibits individuals outside the Ahmadiyah community from carrying out unlawful action against them, hoping to prevent violence against Ahmadiyah which has occurred in the past.  Instead the public is supposed to report any violations of the new regulation to authorities. East Java issued a similar regulation earlier this week and, according to the Jakarta Post, South Sulawesi issued a similar decree yesterday. Many Muslims consider the Ahmadiyah heretical because they do not believe that Muhammad was the last prophet.

Military Backs Off Equal Support For Non-Religious Rock Concert

Last September, the U.S. Army base at Ft. Bragg (NC) hosted the controversial "Rock the Fort" concert sponsored by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.  Groups such as Americans United complained that the concert was designed to proselytize soldiers and community members. (See prior posting.) In response to complaints, military authorities said they would give a comparable level of support to concerts sponsored by non-Christian groups. So secularists planned a "Rock Beyond Belief" concert that would feature noted British atheist Richard Dawkins as a keynoter and would include remarks from Mikey Weinstein of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation. However, according to a report yesterday from AP, concert organizers (who include Sgt. Justin Griffith) have now called off their plans because the Army is not giving them the same level of support as it did to last year's Christian event. Authorities are requiring that the concert take place at one of two indoor theaters rather than allowing a large outdoor event with games and activities. Also the base refuses to cover any of the expenses of the concert, even though it spent $54,000 toward the cost of Rock the Fort. Finally authorities said any concert ads would be required to carry a disclaimer indicating that Ft. Bragg was not endorsing th event, even though it did endorse Rock the Fort. MMRF's Weinstein said his group plans to file suit over Ft. Bragg's actions.

UPDATE: God and Country blog carries a posting giving the Army's side of the story on the issue.

Fired Prison Chaplain Settles Her Claim Against Minnesota

Yesterday's Minneapolis Star Tribune reports on a settlement that has been reached in a lawsuit filed by a former Minnesota prison chaplain who says she was fired for speaking out against the state's use of the InnerChange Freedom Initiative program which she believed would violate the Establishment Clause by promoting evangelical Christianity. (See prior posting.) State prison officials deny that this was their reason for firing Presbyterian minister Kristine Holmgren. They say it was because of a change in the classification of her job.  Under the settlement, Holmgren will receive $227,500.  However the controversial InnerChange program continues to operate in two Minnesota prisons.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Designer Galliano To Be Charged By French Prosecutors Over Anti-Semitic Statements

Fashion designer John Galliano, fired by Christian Dior for making anti-Semitic remarks during an argument at a Paris bar (background), will be placed on trial by French authorities on charges of inciting racial hatred. Yesterday's New York Times reports that the trial which will take place between April and June could lead to $31,000 (US) in fines and up to six months in prison. Through his London Lawyer's office yesterday, Galliano apologized for his remarks. He has left France to enter an alcohol rehabilitation program. Meanwhile, according to the Huffington Post last week, Galliano has filed a defamation action against the couple accusing him of making the anti-Semitic remarks.

New York City Passes Law Requiring Disclosures By Crisis Pregnancy Centers

The New York Times reports that yesterday New York City Council passed Int. No. 371 which requires crisis pregnancy centers that do not provide abortion or contraceptive services to disclose these facts (in Spanish and English) on a sign in their waiting room, on their website and in any ads. They must also disclose on a waiting room sign that licensed medical providers are not available, where that is the case. The bill passed council by a vote of 39- 9 with one abstention, and a spokesperson for Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the mayor will sign the bill.  Opponents of the bill say it is an unconstitutional regulation of speech. A federal district court in Maryland recently struck down a similar Baltimore ordinance, finding that it is a viewpoint based regulation. (See prior posting.)  The director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, however, defended the New York City bill as one directed at preventing deceiving women into thinking they have been to a doctor when employees who offer ultrasound exams are dressed in medical scrubs. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Suit Challenges Prayer At Vermont Town Meeting

The ACLU of Vermont reported yesterday that it has filed suit in state court on behalf of a resident of Franklin, Vermont challenging the town's practice of incorporating a Christian prayer as part of the annual town meeting at  which town officers are elected and other public business conducted. The complaint (full text) in Hackett v. Town of Franklin, (VT Super. Ct., filed 3/1/2011), alleges that the prayer violates Chap. I, Art. 3 of the Vermont Constitution that provides no person can be compelled to attend any religious worship contrary to dictates of conscience. The complaint also alleges that the invocation violates the state's public accommodations act by refusing to permit plaintiff to avail herself of the town meeting on equal terms with others because of her religious beliefs.  The ACLU's website includes audio recordings off the prayers at issue. WCAX yesterday reported on the lawsuit.

In Turkey, Minority Religious Groups Face Obstacles In Opening Places of Worship

Forum 18 reported yesterday on the continuing problems faced by minority religious communities in Turkey in establishing and maintaining formally recognized places of worship. The most significant problem is that of the large Alevi community who want their cemevi to be formally recognized by the state as houses of worship. (See prior related posting.) The ruling AKP party is working on a solution. Also the Caferi-- who are closer to Shia Islam-- want their own mosques and clergy.  Currently only the state-run Diyanet-- which is Sunni controlled-- can open mosques and administer them. Various Christian groups are also facing problems in opening or maintaining their places of worship. While these various groups can have informal places of worship, without recognition they do not get various tax exemptions. Also calling non-recognized buildings houses of worship can lead to prosecution.

Amendments Proposed To Kentucky Anti-Bullying Bill To Protect Anti-Gay Language

Last month, six members of Kentucky's House of Representatives introduced HB 370, a bill that would require school discipline codes to prohibit bullying and cyberbullying directed at a student's race; religion; national origin; ancestry or ethnicity; sexual orientation; physical, mental, emotional, or learning disability;  gender; gender identity and expression; or other distinguishing personal characteristic. (Legislative history.)  Last week, two legislators introduced amendments to the bill designed to protect religiously motivated anti-gay speech. One of the amendments would provide that school discipline codes may not "prohibit any student from expressing ... personal religious beliefs so long as that expression does not include physically harming a student or damaging a student's property". An alternative proposed amendment provides: "Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit or deny the civil expression by any student of religiously based opinions on issues related to sexual orientation." WHAS reports that after being reported out of committee, the bill is now stalled in the House.

Plaintiffs Lack Standing To Challenge Procedure For Omitting Social Security Numbers In Drivers Licence Applications

In Baer-Stefanov v. White, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19139 (ND IL, Feb. 25, 2011), an Illinois federal district court dismissed for lack of standing a challenge to provisions in Illinois' drivers license law that set up procedures for obtaining a religious exemption so an applicant can obtain a license without furnishing a social security number.  Plaintiffs' personal religious beliefs prevent them from using social security numbers because they consider the numbers the mark of the beast prohibited by Revelations 13. However plaintiffs were informed by an attorney in the Secretary of State's office that an exemption would be granted only if an applicant submitted a state form signed by a religious leader who attested that use of a social security number was barred by the beliefs of  his or her religious sect and that the applicant was a member of that sect. Plaintiffs never actually applied for a license because their religious sect leaves beliefs regarding social security numbers to the individual consciences of members. Instead plaintiffs sued alleging that the limitation on the availability of the exemption violated their free exercise and equal protection rights. The court held that because plaintiffs never applied for a religious exemption, and thus have not been denied one, their injury is only threatened, not actual. Had they applied, the Secretary of State might have exercised discretion to treat individual religious convictions the same as beliefs of an entire sect.

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Westboro Responds To Its Supreme Court Win

ABC News reports on the less than gracious response of Margie Phelps, lead counsel for Westboro Baptist Church, to her win today in the Supreme court. (See prior posting.)  Phelps, daughter of the church's pastor, said of the protests that the Supreme Court found protected by the 1st Amendment:
We are trying to warn you to flee the wrath of God, flee the wrath of destruction. What would be more kind than that.... Shut up all that talk about infliction of emotional distress. When you're standing there with your young child's body bits and pieces in a coffin you've been dealt some emotional distress by the Lord your God.... I very much appreciate the fact that I get to be the mouth of God in this matter.
Church leaders say they now plan to quadruple the number of protests around the country that they carry out.

Pakistani Cabinet Member Assassinated Over His Opposition To Blasphemy Law

CNN reports that Shahbaz Bhatti, Pakistan's minister of minority affairs, was assassinated today.  The Taliban claimed responsibility for the fatal shooting of Bhatti, the only Christian member of Pakistan's cabinet.  A Taliban spokesman said that the assassination "is a message to all of those who are against Pakistan's blasphemy laws." Bhatti has been an outspoken critic of the use made of Pakstan's blasphemy ban, saying presciently: "I am ready to sacrifice my life for the principled stand I have taken because the people of Pakistan are being victimized under the pretense of blasphemy law." Dawn has more details on the shooting that took place while Bhatti was being driven to work in Islamabad.

Supreme Court Rules In Favor of Westboro Baptist Church Anti-Gay Funeral Picketers

The U.S. Supreme Court today ruled in an 8-1 decision that Westboro Baptist Church and its members are shielded by the First Amendment from tort liability for their picketing of the funeral of Marine Lance Corporal Matthew Snyder who was killed in Iraq.  Westboro pickets military funerals around the country, often carrying sings criticizing U.S. tolerance for homosexual conduct.  In Snyder v. Phelps, (Sup. Ct., March 2, 2011), the majority, in an opinion written by Chief Justice Roberts, overturned the jury's verdict that had found for Snyder's father on his claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress, intrusion upon seclusion and civil conspiracy. Here are some excerpts from the majority opinion:
The picket signs reflected the church’s view that the United States is overly tolerant of sin and that God kills American soldiers as punishment.... The “content” of Westboro’s signs plainly relates to broad issues of interest to society at large, rather than matters of “purely private concern.”... While these messages may fall short of refined social or political commentary, the issues they highlight—the political and moral conduct of the United States and its citizens, the fate of our Nation, homosexuality in the military, and scandals involving the Catholic clergy—are matters of public import....
The fact that Westboro spoke in connection with a funeral ... cannot by itself transform the nature of Westboro’s speech. Westboro’s signs, displayed on public land next to a public street, reflect the fact that the church finds much to condemn in modern society....
Westboro’s choice to convey its views in conjunction with Matthew Snyder’s funeral made the expression of those views particularly hurtful to many, especially to Matthew’s father. The record makes clear that the applicable legal term—“emotional distress”—fails to capture fully the anguish Westboro’s choice added to Mr. Snyder’s already incalculable grief. But Westboro conducted its picketing peacefully on matters of public concern at a public place adjacent to a public street. Such space occupies a “special position in terms of First Amendment protection.”...
The record confirms that any distress occasioned by Westboro’s picketing turned on the content and viewpoint of the message conveyed, rather than any interferencewith the funeral itself. A group of parishioners standingat the very spot where Westboro stood, holding signs that said “God Bless America” and “God Loves You,” would not have been subjected to liability. It was what Westboro said that exposed it to tort damages....
Snyder argues that even assuming Westboro’s speech is entitled to First Amendment protection generally, the church is not immunized from liability for intrusion upon seclusion because Snyder was a member of a captive audience at his son’s funeral.... Here, Westboro stayed well away from the memorial service. Snyder could see no more than the tops of the signs when driving to the funeral. And there is no indication that the picketing in any way interfered with the funeral service itself. We decline to expand the captive audience doctrine to the circumstances presented here.
While joining the majority opinion, Justice Breyer also filed a concurring opinion emphasizing his understanding that there might be some situations outrageous enough that a state could permit recovery for intentional infliction of emotional distress for a verbal assault, even when it was launched to call attention to views on a matter of public concern.

Justice Alito was the sole dissenter. In his opinion, he argued that while Westboro members have many means to express their views:
It does not follow, however, that they may intentionally inflict severe emotional injury on private persons at a time of intense emotional sensitivity by launching vicious verbal attacks that make no contribution to public debate.
Justice Alito emphasized the publicity seeking nature of Westboro's picketing strategy and focused on Westboro's post-funeral Internet posting that went beyond comments on matters of public concern and also attacked the Snyders personally.

The New York Times reports on the decision.

White House Faith-Based Office Hosts Conversation On Support For Military Families and Veterans

The White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships yesterday described a meeting it hosted last week exploring ways in which congregations and faith- and community-based organizations can support military families and veterans.  Representatives of local and national groups joined representatives from the Defense and Veterans Affairs Departments and the First Lady's Office in a four hour conversation aimed at expanding available tools.

7th Circuit Upholds Injunction Permitting "Be Happy, Not Gay" Slogan on Student Clothing

In Zamecnik v. Indian Prairie School District #204, (7th Cir., March 1, 2011), the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a trial court's entry of a permanent injunction permitting any student at a Naperville, Illinois high school  to display on clothing or personal items the slogan "Be Happy, Not Gay."  It also affirmed the trial court's award of damages of $25. The school had attempted to ban students from wearing the slogan on T-shirts under a rule that barred derogatory comments that relate to race, ethnicity, religion, gender or sexual orientation or disability.  The 7th Circuit had previously ordered the district court to enter a somewhat narrower preliminary injunction. (See prior posting.) The school now argued that it should have been entitled to a hearing to show that it had a reasonable belief it faced a threat of substantial disruption before a permanent injunction was entered. The 7th Circuit disagreed. The court relied in part on the "heckler's veto" doctrine-- that speech cannot be suppressed merely because those who disagree with it engage in threats or violence. Alliance Defense Fund yesterday issued a release discussing the decision.

Archbishop Speaks On U.S. Church-State Principles As Model For Other Countries

Denver Catholic Archbishop Charles Chaput yesterday delivered an interesting keynote address (full text) at a Georgetown University conference on "Religion in American Politics: A Model for Other Countries?". Here are some excerpts from the talk which Chaput said emerged from his experience on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom:
Principles that Americans find self-evident — the dignity of the human person, the sanctity of conscience, the separation of political and sacred authority, the distinction between secular and religious law, the idea of a civil society pre-existing and distinct from the state — are not widely shared elsewhere.... We need to ask ourselves why this is the case....
It's impossible to talk honestly about the American model of religious freedom without acknowledging that it is, to a significant degree, the product of Christian-influenced thought. Dropping this model on non-Christian cultures – as our country learned from bitter experience in Iraq – becomes a very dangerous exercise. One of the gravest mistakes of American policy in Iraq was to overestimate the appeal of Washington-style secularity, and to underestimate the power of religious faith in shaping culture and politics.....
What we see today is a repudiation of [the American] model by atheist regimes and secular ideologies, and also unfortunately by militant versions of some non-Christian religions. The global situation is made worse by the inaction of our own national leadership in promoting to the world one of America's greatest qualities: religious freedom.
This is regrettable because we urgently need an honest discussion on the relationship between Islam and the assumptions of the modern democratic state.... [W]e need to encourage an Islamic public theology that is both faithful to Muslim traditions and also open to liberal norms. Shari'a law is not a solution. Christians living under shari'a uniformly experience it as offensive, discriminatory and a grave violation of their human dignity.
A healthy distinction between the sacred and the secular, between religious law and civil law, is foundational to free societies. Christians, and especially Catholics, have learned the hard way that the marriage of Church and state rarely works. For one thing, religion usually ends up the loser, an ornament or house chaplain for Caesar. For another, all theocracies are utopian – and every utopia ends up persecuting or murdering the dissenters who can't or won't pay allegiance to its claims of universal bliss.

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

Yemini Islamist Leader Interjects Call For Islamic State Into Anti-Government Demonstrations

The New York Times today reports that a new element has been introduced into the anti-government protests in Yemen. Sheik Abdul Majid al-Zindani, head of the Islamist Al Islah party, spoke to several thousand anti-government protesters today calling for replacement of the present government with an Islamic state. It is unclear how much support among largely secularist demonstrators al-Zindani has.  Al-Zindani has been on the U.S. Treasury Department's list of "specially designated global terrorists" since 2004. The Christian Science Monitor says that al-Zindani has been a supporter of  President Saleh until yesterday when he renounced him.

Indian Court Sentences 11 To Death For 2002 Attack On Hindus

Last week, a  court in India's state of Gujarat found 31 Muslims guilty of murder and criminal conspiracy in the 2002 attack that set fire to a train carrying Hindu pilgrims. The attack killed 59 and set off counter anti-Muslim riots that killed up to 2000. (See prior posting.) Today, according to AFP, the court imposed death sentences on 11 of the defendants and life sentences on the 20 others. According to the special prosecutor in the case, the court found the death sentences justified, seeing the crimes as ones that come "under the category of the rarest of the rare."

Judge Should Have Given "Deific Command" Instruction In Murder Trial

In State of New Jersey v. Singleton, (NJ App., Feb. 28, 2011), the New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division reversed the conviction of Boyce Singleton who had been found guilty of murdering his pregnant girlfriend, finding the trial judge's instructions on the insanity defense were incomplete.  The court remanded for a new trial at which the judge is to add an instruction on the insanity standard where defendant believes he was commanded by God to act. The court said:
[T]he record contained evidence from which the jury could have found that defendant believed he had received a deific command to murder Michelle. With only the model jury charge as a guide, the jury could have rejected the insanity defense -- even if it found persuasive the deific command evidence -- by finding defendant understood his actions were contrary to law. To avoid that possibility, a judge must provide ... the further explanation that insanity may be found -- even if defendant knew his actions were contrary to law -- if he proved by a preponderance of the evidence that he acted pursuant to a delusion of receiving a deific command. In other words, in such an instance, the judge must instruct that the defendant may not be held responsible for his actions "where a delusional command could be objectively recognized to confound the difference between lawful behavior and a moral imperative.
The Trentonian reports on the decision.

British Court Struggles With Conflict Between Christian Beliefs and Foster Care Rules On Sexual Orientation

In Britain yesterday, the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice refused to issue a declaratory order in a case pitting a Christian couple's beliefs regarding homosexuality against a proposed interpretation of government standards for approval of applicants who wish to serve as foster care givers.  R Johns v. Derby City Council, (EWHC, Feb. 28, 2011), involves questions  raised by a social worker who interviewed Eunice and Owens Johns as to whether they would be able to give appropriate support to a foster child who might be confused about his or her sexuality.  The government's National Minimum Standards for Fostering Services requires that young people be provided with foster care services that value diversity and promote equality. Derby City Council's Fostering Panel postponed a decision on whether to approve the Johns' application pending further consideration of the legal issues. Both parties agreed to seek a judicial ruling.  The court observed that the proceedings are "most unusual" because they seek a determination in the abstract. However the Court strongly rejected plaintiffs' contention that the case is about whether the government is relegating Christians to second class status.

Groups such as the Christian Legal Centre have issued statements strongly critical of language in the opinion such as the following statement that is part of the court's analysis:
If children, whether they are known to be homosexuals or not, are placed with carers who ... evince an antipathy, objection to or disapproval of, homosexuality and same-sex relationships, there may well be a conflict with the local authority's duty to "safeguard and promote" the "welfare" of looked-after children. There may also be a conflict with the National Minimum Standards for Fostering Services and the Statutory Guidance. Religion, belief and sexual orientation are protected characteristics under the Equality Act 2010.... While as between the protected rights concerning religion and sexual orientation there is no hierarchy of rights, there may ... be a tension between equality provisions concerning religious discrimination and those concerning sexual orientation. Where this is so, Standard 7 of the National Minimum Standards for Fostering and the Statutory Guidance indicate that it must be taken into account and in this limited sense the equality provisions concerning sexual orientation should take precedence.
Yesterday's London Telegraph reports on the decision, focusing on the court's statement that the judges serve a multi-cultural community of many faiths, "but the laws and usages of the realm do not include Christianity, in whatever form."

Monday, February 28, 2011

Review Denied In Pastor's Defamation Claim

Today the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari in Cooke v. Tubra, (Docket No. 10-559, cert. den. 2/28/2011). (Order List.)  In the case, an Oregon appellate court reversed a trial court's dismissal of a pastor's defamation claim against his former church and two of its officers.  The Virginia Court of Appeals held that statements made by a religious organization which do not concern its religious beliefs and practices or which are made for a nonreligious purpose are subject to a qualified privilege.  But they do not enjoy an absolute privilege as the trial judge had held. (See prior posting.)  For further background on the case, see the discussion last year at Volokh Conspiracy.

US Imposes Sanctions on 2 More Iranian Officials For Human Rights Violations

Last week, the U.S. Treasury and State Departments announced the designation of two additional Iranian officials as being responsible for or complicit in serious human rights abuses in Iran since June 2009.  The designation results in freezing assets of the officials, barring transactions with them by U.S. persons and the imposition of visa sanctions.  The two-- Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, Tehran Prosecutor General, and Mohammed Reza Naqdi, commander of the IRGC’s Basij Forces-- join 8 others named in an executive order issued last September. (Background.)  One of the two added yesterday-- Mohammad Naqdi-- was identified by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom in its annual report issued last year as being responsible for particularly severe violations of religious freedom.  In a release last week, USCIRF welcomed the action taken by State and Treasury.

Recent Articles of Interest

From SSRN:
From SmartCILP:
From Bepress:
  • Muslim World Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 7, Issue 2 (Jan. 2011) has been published online. (Full text of articles).

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases

In Crump v. Unknown Patrick, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16807 (WD MI, Feb. 18, 2011), a Michigan federal district court dismissed a Muslim inmate's free exercise, RLUIPA and equal protection claims. Plaintiff claimed that on two occasions he was mistakenly given pork meals and on a third occasion a food worker's neglect in changing gloves cross contaminated his food with pork. Among other things, plaintiff alleged that his prayers to Allah were not answered for 40 days because of his eating the pork products.

In Smith v. Sisto, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17133 (ED CA, Feb. 15, 2010), a California federal magistrate judge recommended rejecting an inmate's claim that his rights under the Free Exercise and Establishment clauses were infringed when he was denied parole in part for failure to attend faith-based Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous programs. The court found that the parole board, while mentioning the programs, did not indicate plaintiff was required to attend, and plaintiff never told the board that the programs conflicted with his religious beliefs.

In Koenig v. Maryland Division of Corrections, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16992 (D MD, Feb. 22, 2011), a Maryland federal district court rejected a Mormon inmate's complaint that Mormons were not granted a full 90 minutes of religious services each week and that he was not permitted to retain more than four religious items.

In Newman v. Brandon, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16976 (ED CA, Feb. 14, 2011), a California federal magistrate judge rejected plaintiff's claim that his free exercise and RLUIPA rights were violated when prison authorities spilled coffee on his Bible.

In Sanders v. Swarthout, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17646 (ED CA, Feb. 22, 2011), a California federal magistrate judge recommended denying an inmate's habeas corpus application, finding that while the parole board discussed petitioner's participation in AA, it did not indicate he was required to participate in any faith-based substance abuse program to be eligible for parole. Also petitioner never told the parole board that his religious beliefs conflicted with participation in AA.

In Gordon v. County of Rockland, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17305 (SD NY, Feb. 18, 2011), an inmate claimed that a jail chaplain distributed to the inmate population copies of two pamphlets defamatory to the Muslim faith. A New York federal district court dismissed the claim against the chaplain in her official capacity but allowed plaintiffs to proceed in their personal capacity free exercise claims and their claims of lack of administrative remedies in the jail.

Gingrich's 2012 Campaign Places More Emphasis On Religious Faith

Today's New York Times reports that as former House speaker Newt Gingrich gears up for a run for the 2012 Republican nomination for President, in his public appearances he is placing a new emphasis on religious faith.  The Times says that on the campaign trail, Gingrich will:
have to grapple with aspects of his life and career that could give pause to elements of the Republican primary electorate, including a lack of a well-established association with religious conservatives and attendant questions about his two divorces. So as he travels the country, he is striking two related notes: that the nation faces not just a fiscal crisis but also a loss of its moral foundation, and that his conversion to Catholicism two years ago is part of an evolution that has given him a deeper appreciation for the role of faith in public life.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

ACLU Says High School Students Should Be Allowed To Post 10 Commandments On Their Lockers

According to WSLS-TV News, the ACLU of Virginia is supporting the right of Floyd County, Virginia high school students to post their personal views-- including copies of the Ten Commandments-- on their own school locker doors. Apparently Floyd County High School administrators removed copies of the Ten Commandments from lockers of members of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes under a school policy that requires school approval for postings on lockers other than messages such as "happy birthday" or "go team." The ACLU's e-mail to the school principal on Friday (quoted in full in the WSLS-TV report) points out that "allowing students to express their religious views on their lockers is not the same as the school itself posting the Ten Commandments or other religious documents." The ACLU says that the 1st Amendment bars the school from treating students' religious speech less favorably than other forms of speech.

Afghanistan Releases Man Jailed For Converting To Christianity

AP reports that in Afghanistan earlier this week, Sayed Mussa, who had been held in jail for nine months on charges of converting to Christianity, was released. After a campaign on his behalf by Christian activists and international diplomats, prosecutors determined that they did not have enough evidence to charge Mussa. U.S. officials say that Mussa is now safely out of Afghanistan.

Warsaw Convention Pre-Empts Religious Discrimination Claim Against Foreign Airline

In Sewer v. LIAT (1974) Ltd., (D VI, Feb. 16, 2011), a Virgin Islands federal district court held that the Warsaw Convention pre-empts a claim brought by a Virgin Islands citizen against a foreign airline for alleged discriminatory exclusion of plaintiff from a flight originating in the British Virgin Islands.  Plaintiff, a black West Indian Rastafarian who wears dreadlocks alleged that Liat airlines discriminated against him on the basis of race, origin and beliefs. The court concluded that Liat's bumping of Sewer from his flight to Antigua was based on neutral selection criteria. It went on to hold that even if there was discrimination, the only remedy is under the Warsaw Convention, and that document gives no claim to plaintiff because there was no "accident" and no bodily injury alleged. Today's Antigua Observer reports on the decision.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Federal Court Says Utah's Reformation of FLDS Trust Violates Establishment Clause

In a surprising decision yesterday, a Utah federal district court held unconstitutional the five years of state court proceedings aimed at reforming the polygamous FLDS Church's United Effort Plan Trust. Utah courts have attempted to carry out the reforms using non-religious neutral principles of law.  The Trust holds title to property on which FLDS members live. The reformation proceedings grew out of a 2005 petition by the Utah and Arizona Attorneys General asking a Utah state court to remove or suspend the UEP trustees who failed to defend the trust against tort lawsuits.  (See prior posting.) In Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints v. Wisan, (D UT, Feb. 24, 2011), the Utah federal district court held:
By reforming a religious trust and managing it without regard to religion, the state actors became impermissibly entangled with religion. While it is accurate to say the states' actions did not establish a religion, their actions certainly went a long way toward disestablishing one.... The primary effect of the state court's decision to rewrite the Trust and administer it as a secular instrument was to inhibit religion. The resulting intrusion into the everyday life of the FLDS church and its members fostered not only "excessive government entanglement with religion," but was a virtual takeover by the state.
Judge Dee Benson observed that attempting to separate the secular parts of the UEP Trust from the religious parts is like trying "to eliminate football from the Super Bowl."  While much of the attention given to the case has stemmed from the polygamous practices of the FLDS Church and its leaders, the court said:
While it is true the state court judge in reforming the Trust recognized that the FLDS church practiced polygamy, which is illegal, and that the Special Fiduciary would not in any manner be allowed to make Trust administration decisions on the basis of polygamist practices, the state judge nowhere based her decision to reform or administer the Trust on a finding that it was being used to commit or support criminal activity.
Deseret News reports on the decision.

Maryland Senate Approves Same-Sex Marriage Bill

The Maryland state Senate yesterday passed the Civil Marriage Protection Act (SB 116), by a vote of 25-21. The bill authorizes same-sex marriage in the state, and provides that clergy may not be required to solemnize marriages in violation of their free exercise of religion.  The bill also exempts religious organizations from provisions calling for non-discrimination in public accommodations and insurance when they refuse on religious grounds to provide facilities, services or benefits for same-sex marriages. The bill now goes to the House of Delegates where, according to yesterday's Washington Post, its prospects for passage are uncertain. Opposition to the bill has come particularly from the Maryland Catholic Conference and from members of the state's black churches.

Refusal To Delay Civil Trail For Plaintiff's Religious Observance Was Abuse of Discretion

In Neustadter v. Holy Cross Hospital of Silver Spring, Inc., (MD Ct. App., Feb. 24, 2011), Maryland's Court of Appeals-- the state's highest court-- held that a trial court abused its discretion when it refused to suspend a civil medical malpractice trial for two days when plaintiff and his attorney could not attend because of religious obligations imposed by the Jewish holiday of Shavuot.  During their absence, defendant  put on its entire case in chief. The majority opinion, without reaching constitutional free exercise claims, held that the trial court abused its discretion in denying plaintiff a reasonable accommodation of his religious beliefs to permit him to participate in his trial. While plaintiff had delayed informing the trial court of the scheduling conflict, the majority held that plaintiff was not so untimely as to indicate an utter lack of diligence.

A concurring opinion by Judge Harrell, joined by Judge Murphy, engaged in a lengthy analysis of the free exercise issues involved in the case-- rejecting plaintiff's free exercise claim-- while nevertheless saying that the majority was correct in not reaching the constitutional issues.  The concurrence concluded that:
the judge’s denial of Petitioner’s motions to postpone the trial was the judicial analog to a generally-applicable legislative act, in that there is no evidence in the record from which one could conclude that the judge’s ruling would have been any different if faced with nonreligious justifications for the requested postponement.... Petitioner was free to celebrate Shavuot as he deemed fit; the trial court did not compel his presence in court in violation of the Jewish faith. Accordingly ... I do not think a "substantial burden" was placed upon his Free Exercise rights.
The concurrence went on however to find an abuse of discretion because "the facts in evidence ... do not support the proffered rationales for denying Petitioner's motions to postpone the trial."

A second concurrence by Judge Adkins argues that the court should reach the constitutional issues presented and should conclude that because the trial court's action was neutral and of general applicability, no heightened scrutiny was called for.  She agreed, however, with the majority's analysis of the trial court's abuse of discretion. She added: "I would not address the intriguing issue Judge Harrell raises of whether the Free Exercise clause is 'applicable with equal force to the judicial branch.'" (See prior related posting.) The Baltimore Sun reports on the decision.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Iraqi Supreme Court Interprets Constitutional Provision Barring Laws From Violating Settled Rulings of Islam

An op-ed published on Jurist earlier this month discusses a little-noticed decision handed down last December by Iraq's Federal Supreme Court which for the first time interpreted the provision in Iraq's Constitution (Art. 2) prohibiting civil laws from violating "settled rulings" of Islam.  At issue was a provision in Iraq's Law of Evidence requiring contracts over a certain amount to be proved by showing a writing.  The lower court had refused to accept oral evidence of the existence of a construction contract. Appellant claimed that requiring a writing was inconsistent with sharia, and thus invalid. The Federal Supreme Court, instead of merely holding that there was no "settled ruling" against requiring written contracts, engaged in its own interpretation of the Qur'an, citing two verses which it said supported requiring a written document. Haider Ala Hamoudi, writer of the op-ed, suggests that while Islamic religious authorities were not exercised by the Court's interpretation of religious law here, it would be very different if the Federal Supreme Court challenged religious authorities on core matters such as women's divorce rights.

Canadian Street Preacher Convicted For Using Sound Amplification System

In the Canadian province of Alberta, the Calgary Court of Queen's Bench yesterday reversed a provincial court's dismissal of charges against street preacher Artur Pawlowski who violated city park rules by using a sound amplification system. (See prior posting.) According to the Calgary Herald, the court rejected the argument that the ban on amplification systems was vague and overly broad. Justice Robert Hall wrote:
I am . . . satisfied that the intention of the bylaw is not to restrict the use of such items as hearing aids, cellphones, iPods or transistor radios within a park, none of which affect the safety, accessibility and enjoyment of the parks by the general public. The only reasonable interpretation of this section, when viewed in harmony with the scheme and object of the bylaw, is that it is intended to prohibit noise amplified to such an extent as to interfere with the enjoyment of the park by other users.
The court apparently also rejected arguments that the ban violated Pawlowski's freedom of expression and religion protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in imposing penalties on Pawlowski.

Defendant Pleads Guilty To Hate Crime Against Mosque Playground

A Department of Justice press release reports that yesterday in a Fort Worth, Texas federal district court, Henry Clay Glaspell pleaded guilty to a hate crime charge growing out of his setting fire to playground equipment at an Arlington, Texas mosque.  The arson was part of a series of ethnically motivated acts directed at persons associated with the mosque who were of Arab or Middle Eastern descent. Glaspell also admitted that he stole and damaged mosque property, threw used cat litter at the front door of the mosque, and shouted racial or ethnic slurs. Sentencing is set for July 11.

Tennessee Legislators Propose Elaborate Anti-Sharia Bills

The most elaborate example yet of an anti-Sharia bill was introduced last week in the Tennessee House and Senate.  The Tennessean reports that SB 1028 (full text), and the identical HB 1353, were filed on Thursday to meet the deadline for introducing bills for the current session of the legislature, and that they may yet be amended.  The bills outlaw providing material support to any organization that the state Attorney General designates as a "sharia organization." The bill declares that it is not directed at the peaceful practice of Islam.  Instead it is premised, among other things, on the bill's declaration that "Sharia requires all its adherents to actively and passively support the replacement of America’s constitutional republic, including the representative government of this state with a political system based upon sharia." The 20-page bills, introduced by State Sen. Bill Ketron, R-Murfreesboro, and state Rep. Judd Matheny, R-Tullahoma, were drafted by David Yerushalmi, an Arizona attorney who heads the Society of Americans for National Existence. Critics say the bills are based on a complete misunderstanding of sharia law.

Group Challenges Religious Display In County Official's Office

Up North Live reports that a letter from the Freedom from Religion Foundation to the Cheboygan County, Michigan Drain Commissioner raises questions about the propriety of religious displays in the private offices of government officials.  FFRF objects to a cross and a nativity scene in Commissioner Dennis Lennox's office.  Lennox objects saying: "This is my private office in my private area, I'm not trying to force my faith down anybody's throat, I'm just saying I celebrate Christmas."

FBI Sued For Planting Informant In California Mosques

ACLU of Southern California announced yesterday that a class action lawsuit has been filed against the FBI for planting an informant in Orange County, California mosques.  Informant Craig Montielh gathered information for 14 months in 2006 and 2007, posing as a convert to Islam. He was told to focus on those who were more devout in their religious practices. The lawsuit alleges that targeting Muslim Americans amounts to religious discrimination and asks for the FBI to turn over or destroy all information gathered through the investigation.  The suit also seeks damages for emotional distress for three named plaintiffs.In addition to the ACLU, the Greater Los Angeles Council for American-Islamic Relations and a private law firm were involved in filing the suit. (See prior related posting.)