Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, June 08, 2015
Obama Appoints Rabbi To Vacancy On Commission For Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad
Last Friday, President Obama announced his intention to appoint Rabbi Abba Cohen to the 21-member U.S. Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad. One of the more obscure federal agencies, the Commission, which began operations in 1990, is tasked by the legislation creating it to identify and encourage the preservation of "those cemeteries, monuments, and historic buildings located abroad which are associated with the foreign heritage of United States citizens from eastern and central Europe, particularly those cemeteries, monuments, and buildings which are in danger of deterioration or destruction..." Rabbi Cohen is the Washington Director and Counsel for Agudath Israel of America,
Labels:
Obama
British Employment Tribunal Vindicates Christian Woman Fired For Comments About Homosexuality
In Mbuyi v. Newpark Childcare (Shepherds Bush) Ltd., (Empl. Trib., June 4, 2015), a British Employment Tribunal in Watford held that Sarah Mbuyi, a 31-year old nursery assistant who was a Belgian national and and evangelical Christian, was the victim of religious discrimination when she was fired because of a conversation she had with a lesbian co-worker who was in a civil partnership. In the course of the conversation, Mbuyi told her co-worker that she believes homosexuality is a sin. The conversation upset the co-worker sufficiently that she asked to be transferred to a different room where she would not be working with Mbuyi. The Tribunal concluded that under the circumstances the firing of Mbuyi was a disproportionate response. The Tribunal said in part:
The respondent was not anti-Christian.... The issues in this case arose out of the claimant's belief that homosexuality is a sin.... It is a belief worthy of respect in a democratic society, is not incompatible with human dignity and is not in conflict with the fundamental rights of others. Whilst some may dispute those propositions, we are considering here the belief itself. When, whether and how such belief maybe manifested, however, is one of the issues in this case, given the inherent interplay with the right not to be discriminated against because of sexual orientation.The decision has been widely reported in the British media. (The Guardian, Mirror, Christian Concern, Christianity Today, National Secular Society).
Labels:
Britain,
Employment discrimination,
Homosexuality
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
From SSRN (Religious Law):
- Danielle Weatherby, The Arkansas 'Mini-RFRA' is Bad Policy, (May 21, 2015).
- Tipu Salman Makhdoom, Politics of Religion: Ahmadis of Pakistan, (May 23, 2015).
- Jennifer Taub, Is Hobby Lobby a Tool for Limiting Corporate Constitutional Rights?, (Constitutional Commentary, Forthcoming).
- Masua Sagiv, Cultural Bias in Judicial Decision Making, (35(2) Boston College Journal of Law & Social Justice 229 (2015)).
- Eric Alan Isaacson, Free Exercise for Whom? -- Could the Religious-Liberty Principle that Catholics Established in Perez v. Sharp Also Protect Same-Sex Couples' Right to Marry?, (University of Detroit Mercy Law Review, Vol. 92, No. 1, 2015).
- Surabhi Chopra & Prita Jha, Front Matter for: On Their Watch: Mass Violence and State Apathy in India, (S. Chopra & P. Jha, eds, Three Essays Collective, 2014).
- Sherry F. Colb, Decoding 'Never Again', (Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion, Vol. 16, Spring 2015).
- Susannah William Pollvogt, Cleburne Not Romer: Objective versus Subjective Theories of Animus, (June 5, 2015).
- Joseph William Singer, We Don't Serve Your Kind Here: Public Accommodations and the Mark of Sodom, (Boston University Law Review, Vol. 95, p. 929, 2015).
From SSRN (Religious Law):
- Daniel Pascoe, Is Diya a Form of Clemency?, (Boston University International Law Journal, 2016).
- Levi Cooper, Jewish Law, Hasidic Lore, and Hollywood Legend: The Cantor, the Mystic, and the Jurist, (Critical Analysis of Law 2, no. 2 (Fall 2015)).
- Hershey H. Friedman, ‘Let Justice Pierce the Mountain’: Morality, Ethics, and Law in the Talmud, (June 2, 2015).
From SmartCILP and elsewhere:
- Richard Chused, Dream Vignettes, 59 New York Law School Law Review 111-142 (2014/15).
- David A. Grenardo, Improving the Law School Classroom and Experience Through Prayer: An Empirical Study, 13 Ave Maria Law Review 71-120 (2015).
- Lee B. Burgunder, Can the PTO Find Its Way with Jesus?, 19 Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review 63-97 (2015).
- Rosalie Berger Levinson, Gender Equality vs. Religious Autonomy: Suing Religious Employers for Sexual Harassment After Hosanna-Tabor, 11 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties 89-119 (2015).
- Symposium. Religious Accommodation in the Age of Civil Rights. Introduction by Nomi Maya Stolzenberg and Douglas NeJaime; articles by Mark Tushnet, Ira C. Lupu, Thomas C. Berg, Frederick Mark Gedicks, Louise Melling and Elizabeth Sepper. 38 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 1-233 (2015).
- Marta Kolankiewicz, Anti-Muslim Violence and the Possibility of Justice, (2015), (Dissertation from academia.edu)
Labels:
Articles of interest
Sunday, June 07, 2015
Alabama Bill To Eliminate Marriage Licenses Dies In House Judiciary Committee
The Daily Caller reported yesterday that in Alabama SB 377 previously passed by the Alabama state Senate to eliminate marriage licenses died in the House Judiciary Committee last week. As previously reported, the bill which would have replaced issuance of licenses with marriage contracts entered into and recorded by the couple was seen in part as a way of dealing with religious objections by some probate court employees to issuing licenses to same-sex couples. One Republican member of the House Judiciary Committee who voted against the bill explained: "It didn’t make sense to me to make such a sweeping change about how we do marriage, just because of concern about some probate judges in a bit of a spot."
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Howard v. Joyce Meyer Ministries, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70768 (ED WI, June 1, 2015), a Wisconsin federal district court allowed a Therevedan Buddhist inmate to move ahead with complaints that a picture of Jesus was displayed on the library wall; gift bags containing hygiene products included Bible passages; the TV channel carrying inmate announcements had Christian radio audio; and a religious necklace he ordered was classified as contraband.
In Williams v. Leonard, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72070 (ND NY, June 4, 2015), a New York federal district court permitted an inmate to move ahead with RLUIPA claims for injunctive relief regarding length of pants and family participation in Eid el-Adha, but dismissed his equal protection and damages claims.
In Anderson v. Olson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72595 (WD WI, June 4, 2015), a Wisconsin federal district court dismissed a Nation of Islam inmate's claim that his free exercise rights were infringed when officials threw out his copy of the Qur'an along with other books of his that were over the limit for the number of allowable books, rather than mailing them out to his family. However he was allowed to proceed on his due process claim.
In Furnace v. Gipson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72570 (ED CA, June 3, 2015), a California federal magistrate judge recommended permitting an inmate who practiced Shetaut Neter to proceed with his claim that his free exercise rights were infringed when he was unable to change his name or obtain items needed to practice his religion, particularly an ankh, a prayer mat, cleansing oil, and various dried fruits.
In Prim v. Jackson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72721 (SD OH, June 4, 2015), an Ohio federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendation (see prior posting) and permitted a Natsarim (Messianic Jewish) inmate to move to an evidentiary hearing on his request for a preliminary injunction regarding Sabbath services, recognition of plaintiff's religious calendar, sack meals on Friday night for the Sabbath and retaliation for filing grievances.
In Kalican v. Dzurenda, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72917 (D CT, June 5, 2015), a Connecticut federal district court denied an inmate's motion for rehearing on his complaint that on one occasion he was barred from carrying his kufi to the dining hall in his pocket.
In Amaker v. Goord, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73133 (WD NY, June 5, 2015), a New York federal magistrate judge held that absent accompanying physical injury, under federal statutory law an inmate cannot recover compensatory damages for denial of access to religious services while in special housing unit. However the court awarded $1 nominal damages. It also granted plaintiff's request for a specific witness on a separate claim for punitive damages.
In Freeman v. Arpaio, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71870 (D AZ, June 2, 2015), an Arizona federal district court dismissed with leave to amend using the proper court-approved form an atheist inmate's complaint that the Establishment Clause is violated by patriotic and religious songs that are played every morning and evening on the jail's televisions.
In Williams v. Leonard, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72070 (ND NY, June 4, 2015), a New York federal district court permitted an inmate to move ahead with RLUIPA claims for injunctive relief regarding length of pants and family participation in Eid el-Adha, but dismissed his equal protection and damages claims.
In Anderson v. Olson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72595 (WD WI, June 4, 2015), a Wisconsin federal district court dismissed a Nation of Islam inmate's claim that his free exercise rights were infringed when officials threw out his copy of the Qur'an along with other books of his that were over the limit for the number of allowable books, rather than mailing them out to his family. However he was allowed to proceed on his due process claim.
In Furnace v. Gipson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72570 (ED CA, June 3, 2015), a California federal magistrate judge recommended permitting an inmate who practiced Shetaut Neter to proceed with his claim that his free exercise rights were infringed when he was unable to change his name or obtain items needed to practice his religion, particularly an ankh, a prayer mat, cleansing oil, and various dried fruits.
In Prim v. Jackson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72721 (SD OH, June 4, 2015), an Ohio federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendation (see prior posting) and permitted a Natsarim (Messianic Jewish) inmate to move to an evidentiary hearing on his request for a preliminary injunction regarding Sabbath services, recognition of plaintiff's religious calendar, sack meals on Friday night for the Sabbath and retaliation for filing grievances.
In Kalican v. Dzurenda, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72917 (D CT, June 5, 2015), a Connecticut federal district court denied an inmate's motion for rehearing on his complaint that on one occasion he was barred from carrying his kufi to the dining hall in his pocket.
In Amaker v. Goord, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73133 (WD NY, June 5, 2015), a New York federal magistrate judge held that absent accompanying physical injury, under federal statutory law an inmate cannot recover compensatory damages for denial of access to religious services while in special housing unit. However the court awarded $1 nominal damages. It also granted plaintiff's request for a specific witness on a separate claim for punitive damages.
In Freeman v. Arpaio, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71870 (D AZ, June 2, 2015), an Arizona federal district court dismissed with leave to amend using the proper court-approved form an atheist inmate's complaint that the Establishment Clause is violated by patriotic and religious songs that are played every morning and evening on the jail's televisions.
Labels:
Prisoner cases
Saturday, June 06, 2015
Court's Determination of Church's Voting Membership Upheld
In Fairfield Pentecostal Church v. Johnson, (LA App., June 3, 2015), a Louisiana state appeals court upheld a trial court's decision determining a church's voting membership for purposes of a special vote on whether to dismiss the pastor, saying in part:
The trial court determined at the hearing that none of the members on the original roll had been disfellowshipped; and it allowed another list of members gathered in November 2013 by Reverend Franks, who had kept no roll since his installment in 2010, to be counted toward the membership roll. In order to prevent the solicitation of new members for purposes of litigation, the trial court limited the membership to these two lists. We can think of no more equitable solution.
Labels:
Ecclesiastical abstention,
Louisiana
Friday, June 05, 2015
Minneapolis Archdiocese Charged Criminally For Inadequate Responses To Priest Abuse
In a 44-page criminal complaint (full text) filed today, the state of Minnesota charged the Catholic Diocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis with contributing to the need for protection or services and contributing to the delinquency or status as a juvenile offender in connection with three separate victims of clergy sexual abuse. A civil complaint was also filed by the state. As summarized by the Minneapolis Star Tribune:
UPDATE: Here is an audio recording of the news conference in which the County Attorney announced the criminal charges. According to MPR News, he said that the investigation continues, but as of now prosecutors do not have sufficient evidence to charge any individual church officials criminally. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge for the update lead.]
The charges stem from the archdiocese’s oversight of former priest Curtis Wehmeyer, who is now serving a prison term for abusing two boys while he was pastor of Blessed Sacrament Church in St. Paul.At a press conference, Ramsey County Attorney John Choi said:
Today we are alleging a disturbing institutional and systemic pattern of behavior committed by the highest levels of leadership of the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis over the course of decades.
By filing criminal charges and taking civil action, we are holding the archdiocese accountable for its failure to responsibly and meaningfully respond to numerous and repeated reports of troubling conduct by Curtis Wehmeyer.The New York Times also reported on the filing of the six misdemeanor charges, each of which carries a maximum fine of $3000. By filing charges only against the Archdiocese, and not against individuals, the possibility of imposing the 1 year prison sentence that is also available on each charge disappears.
UPDATE: Here is an audio recording of the news conference in which the County Attorney announced the criminal charges. According to MPR News, he said that the investigation continues, but as of now prosecutors do not have sufficient evidence to charge any individual church officials criminally. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge for the update lead.]
Labels:
Catholic,
Minnesota,
Sex abuse claims
Guam's Same-Sex Marriage Ban Struck Down
Pacific Daily News reports that in a ruling from the bench, Guam's chief federal judge this morning struck down the island's ban on same-sex marriage. A written opinion is expected on Monday. Guam, a U.S. territory, is part of the 9th Circuit which has already held same-sex marriage bans unconstitutional. (See prior posting.) Guam is the last jurisdiction in the 9th Circuit to have its ban invalidated.
UPDATE: The full opinion in Aguero v. Calvo, (D Guam, June 8, 2015) is now available.
UPDATE: The full opinion in Aguero v. Calvo, (D Guam, June 8, 2015) is now available.
Labels:
Guam,
Same-sex marriage
Nevada Enacts Expansive School Choice Legislation
As reported by the Las Vegas Review Journal, on Tuesday, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval signed SB 302 (full text) creating an extensive school choice program. The legislature gave final passage to the bill last week. Under the bill, the parents of a child who has attended public school for 100 consecutive days may move the child to a private school (including a religious school), a tutoring facility or to home schooling and have the state pay into an educational savings account for the student an amount equal to 90% (or 100% for low-income and disabled) of the statewide average basic support per pupil. Currently 100% of the statewide average is about $5700. The funds may be used for tuition, fees, textbooks, tutoring, testing and transportation. A student may also be moved part-time to another educational facility and spend part-time in public school, receiving a partial grant. The Reno Gazette Journal has more details of the legislation. Payments under the new law will start Jan. 1, 2016.
Opponents of the legislation argued in part that the bill is unconstitutional because it allows taxpayer money to be spent on religiously-oriented private schools. The Nevada Constitution, Art. 11, Sec. 10, provides: "No public funds of any kind or character whatever, State, County or Municipal, shall be used for sectarian purpose."
Opponents of the legislation argued in part that the bill is unconstitutional because it allows taxpayer money to be spent on religiously-oriented private schools. The Nevada Constitution, Art. 11, Sec. 10, provides: "No public funds of any kind or character whatever, State, County or Municipal, shall be used for sectarian purpose."
Labels:
Nevada,
School vouchers
Thursday, June 04, 2015
9th Circuit: State AG Can Require Disclosure of IRS Form 990 List of Donors
In a decision handed down early last month, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld California's requirement that in order to solicit tax deductible contributions in the state, a charity or other non-profit must file an annual report that includes an unredacted IRS Form 990 Schedule B, the names and contributions of significant donors. In Center for Competitive Politics v. Harris, (9th Cir., May 1, 2015), the court held that the organization challenging the requriement had not shown that its donors would experience threats or harassment because of the disclosure requirement. It also rejected the argument that Congress had intended to protect the privacy of Schedule B information. BNA Daily Report for Executives (subscription required) reported on the decision this week.
Labels:
California,
Internal Revenue Code
7th Circuit Keeps RLUIPA Suit Against Chicago Alive
In World Outreach Conference v. City of Chicago, (7th Cir., June 1, 2015), the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals breathed new life into a RLUIPA case that has been in litigation for 9 years. The court reversed the district court's grant of summary judgment to the city of Chicago as to claims against the city for damages because of delays in granting licenses to World Outreach so it could operate a former YMCA building for its religious purposes. World Outreach argued it lost some $591,000 that it could have made by housing Hurricane Katrina evacuees in the building. The court's opinion by Judge Posner included comments about the power of aldermen in Chicago politics. Judge Cudahy concurred with one of the shortest and most cryptic opinions ever:
Unfortunately; and I think the opinion must be stamped with a large “MAYBE.”(See prior related posting.) RLUIPA Defense blog reports on the decision.
Connecticut Legislature Makes Religious Exemption From Vaccination Requirements Marginally More Difficult
On Tuesday, the Connecticut General Assembly gave final passage to HB 6949 (full text) and sent it to the governor for his signature. The bill places additional procedural requirements on parents seeking to exempt their children on religious grounds from vaccination requirements. As reported by WNPR:
Currently, [parents or guardians] must simply present a statement that the immunization would be contrary to the child's religious beliefs. But under the bill which cleared the Senate Tuesday, such statements must be submitted annually and officially "acknowledged" by a notary public, attorney, judge, family support magistrate, court clerk, deputy clerk or justice of the peace.However another bill pending in the legislature would, if enacted, require the notarized statements be submitted only when the child enters kindergarten and when he or she enters 7th grade.
Labels:
Connecticut,
Vaccination
European Court Holds Hearing On Alevis' Complaint Against Turkey
The Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights yesterday held a hearing in DoÄŸan and Others v. Turkey. (Webcast of full hearing with English simultaneous translation.) The case, brought by members of Turkey's Alevi community, involves claims of unequal treatment. Daily Sabah, reporting on the hearing, provides more background:
Applicants to the court requested the state provide the same status to cemevis as mosques and offer free public services. Several Alevi citizens had filed a lawsuit against the Prime Ministry in 2005 after their request for cemevis to be granted a new status was rejected. They then took their case to the European Court of Human Rights in 2010. They claim Turkish authorities violated the European Convention on Human Rights concerning freedom of religion and thought and its ban on discrimination. An Alevi foundation had asked the government to implement regulations that would enable the bills of cemevis to be paid through a fund administered by the Presidency of Religious Affairs (DİB) that oversees the operation of mosques. Turkish courts had dismissed the foundation's application, basing their decision on the directorate's opinion that cemevis are not places of worship, but rather places of assembly in which spiritual ceremonies are held.
Labels:
Alevi,
European Court of Human Rights,
Turkey
U.S.-Based Sikh Group Sues Facebook Over Takedown of Its Page In India
The U.S. based advocacy group Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) this week filed a federal lawsuit against Facebook, Inc. complaining that Facebook has blocked access throughout the country of India to SFJ's Facebook page. The complaint (full text) in Sikhs For Justice"SFJ", Inc. v. Facebook, Inc., (ND CA, filed 6/2/2015), contends that Facebook is subject to the public accommodation provisions of the federal 1964 Civil Rights Act and California's Unruh Civil Rights Act. It alleges that Facebook collaborated with the government of India in retaliating against SFJ for its online campaign against forced conversion of Christians, Muslims and Sikhs to Hinduism; support for a referendum in Punjab for an independent Sikh country; and amendment of the Indian constitution's provision that labels Sikhs as Hindus. The complaint alleges further:
Defendant willfully, intentionally, purposefully, knowingly, recklessly, and/or negligently deprived Plaintiff and its members in the entire India of the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of Defendant’s internet-based social networking service as a place of public accommodation, as defined in 42 USC Section 2000a.
... Defendant did so deprive Plaintiff and its members with discrimination and segregation on the ground of race, religion, ancestry, and national origin.Times of India reports on the lawsuit.
Labels:
Facebook,
Public accommodation law,
Sikh
California School District Settles Allowing Native American Graduate To Wear Eagle Feather
California's Clovis Unified School District reached a settlement yesterday with Christian Titman, a Native American high school senior who had filed suit two days earlier to force the school district to allow him to wear an eagle feather during graduation ceremonies today. (ACLU press release.) Titman argued that the refusal to allow him to honor his Native American heritage and family in this way violated his free speech and religious exercise rights. (Full text of complaint in Titman v. Clovis Unified School District, CA Super. Ct., filed 6/1/2015.) The settlement agreement (full text) provides in part:
Christian Titman will be permitted to ... wear the agreed upon prepared eagle feather ... in his hair during the graduation ceremony; and ... upon receipt of his diploma ... is permitted to adorn his graduation cap with the agreed upon eagle feather, and to participate in the tassel turn with the eagle feather connected to his tassel....Under the agreement, the school will issue a statement indicating that while it remains committed to its tradition of decorum at graduation, it is also committed to working with students and families on accommodations for sincerely held religious beliefs.
Labels:
Graduation ceremonies,
Native Americans
Wednesday, June 03, 2015
More Legal Maneuvering Against Same-Sex Marriage In Alabama As U.S. Supreme Court's Decision Nears
With the U.S. Supreme Court less than a month away from finally settling the issue, legal sparring over same-sex marriage continues in Alabama. Two groups that had secured from the Alabama Supreme Court a writ of mandamus ordering Probate Court judges around the state to discontinue the issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples (see prior posting) filed a "Motion for Clarification and Reaffirmation of the Court's Orders Upholding and Enforcing Alabama's Marriage Laws". The motion and supporting memorandum of law (full text) in Ex parte State of Alabama ex rel. Alabama Policy Institute, (AL Sup. Ct., filed 6/2/2015), asked the state Supreme Court to reaffirm its order in light of intervening U.S. federal district court decisions (see prior posting) granting a preliminary injunction (which the district court then stayed pending the U.S. Supreme Court's upcoming decision) barring all Alabama probate judges from refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Liberty Counsel issued a press release announcing the filing of the motion which said in part: "The Alabama Supreme Court’s prior mandamus Order, and perhaps its disposition of this motion, should send a message that any ruling by Judge Granade or even the United States Supreme Court inventing a right to same-sex 'marriage'a under the U.S. Constitution is illegitimate."
Labels:
Alabama,
Same-sex marriage
Court Allows Student Distribution of Gospel Tracts
In Leal v. Everett Public Schools, (WD WA, May 29, 2015), a Washington federal district court entered an order (full text) expunging the suspensions of high school senior Michael Leal who has been disciplined for insisting on handing out gospel tracts to fellow students. The court also held that the portion of Everett Public Schools' policies that allow a student to hand out literature only if it is written or produced by the student violates Leal's free speech rights. However, the court permitted the school to limit the locations and times at which Leal can hand out literature, and limit his preaching to a free speech area. The court spelled out the reasons for its order in a ruling from the bench. King5 News reports on the decision as does a press release from Pacific Justice Institute.
Labels:
Free speech,
Religion in schools
Oregon Tax Court Says Rectory Not Tax-Exempt
In St. Mary Star of the Sea Catholic Church, Astoria v. Clatsop County Assessor, (OR Tax Ct., May 6, 2015), an Oregon Tax Court magistrate held that a residential structure located 1.5 miles from the church used as a church rectory did not qualify for a property tax exemption "because the evidence shows the rectory is not reasonably necessary to carry out the religious aims of the church..." The court said in part:
Although [the parish priest] does write sermons and homilies at the rectory, those duties do not require close physical proximity to the church.... The other uses of the rectory have no direct connection to the church; they certainly do not require a rectory in close proximity to the church. There was generalized testimony about the availability of guest bedrooms for visiting priests, deacons, and seminarians, but no specific testimony or other evidence that such officials have stayed at the subject property and, if so, how many and how often they were there....Forbes reports on the decision.
Labels:
Oregon,
Property tax
Cert Petition Filed In Family Dispute Over Repatriation of Athlete Jim Thorpe's Remains To Tribal Cemetery
Yesterday a petition for certiorari (full text) was filed with the U.S. Supreme Court in Sac and Fox Nation of Oklahoma v. Borough of Jim Thorpe. In the case, the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in a 2014 decision (full text) held that despite its literal language, Congress did not intend the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) to apply to a dispute between the sons of famous Native American Athlete Jim Thorpe who died in 1953 and the Pennsylvania town that renamed itself after Thorpe in an agreement with Thorpe's widow (his third wife) to have his remains buried there. Some of Thorpe's children from prior marriages have insisted that his remains be moved to Sac and Fox tribal land in Oklahoma. Wall Street Journal's Law Blog reports on the cert. petition.
Labels:
Graves,
Native Americans,
US Supreme Court
Church Sues To Enforce Bequest
The Tampa Bay Times reported yesterday on a lawsuit filed by Christ the King Catholic Church, one of the Tampa, Florida area's most prominent churches, against Teresa "Terri" Gaffney, a lawyer who is prominent in the Hillsborough County Republican Party. The church says that Gaffney's father John J. Gaffney who died in 2011 had directed in his will that his house be sold, the proceeds used to pay any remaining expenses for his care, and the remainder be distributed to the Church. But instead, Theresa Gaffney transferred the house to her daughter. Gaffney says the house was never willed to the Church, and that the Church is suing her because her children have been raised in the Jewish faith of her husband. The house is valued at $344,000.
Michigan Supreme Court Dismisses Chabad Property Dispute On Statute of Limitations Grounds
In Chabad-Lubavitch of Michigan v. Schuchman, (MI Sup. Ct., May 20, 2015), the Michigan Supreme Court in a brief opinion reversed the state court of appeals in a dispute between Chabad-Lubavitch of Michigan and a local Chabad organization over ownership of a Chabad center in West Bloomfield. The parent organization claimed that the property should have been titled in its name. In the case, the appeals court had rejected defendants' statute of limitations defense, holding that the statute was equitably tolled during the time that the parties were engaged in Chabad's mandatory ecclesiastical dispute resolution process. (See prior posting.) Reversing, the Michigan Supreme Court said "there are no grounds on which to equitably toll the statute of limitations."
Labels:
Church property,
Jewish
Tuesday, June 02, 2015
27 Members of Congress Urge New AG To Help Strengthen Anti-Profiling Ban
Yesterday 27 members of Congress sent a letter (full text) to U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch urging stronger limits on religious and ethnic profiling than are set out in December 2014 guidelines issued by her predecessor Eric Holder. While the 2014 guidelines for the first time extended anti-profiling restrictions to national origin, gender, gender identity, religion, and sexual orientation (see prior posting), yesterday's letter pointed out a number of weaknesses in those guidelines: they are only advisory and do not offer victims any remedy; they still permit surveillance in order to map and infiltrate Muslim communities based on religious identity; and they do not cover profiling at airports, borders or by state and local officials. The letter urged Lynch to work with Congress to adopt a comprehensive federal anti-profiling program. [Thanks to Glenn Katon for the lead.]
USCIRF Condemns Sudan's Prosecution of 2 Pastors
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom issued a press release yesterday condemning the government of Sudan for its continuing prosecution of two Christian clergymen on "baseless charges of undermining Sudan’s constitution and waging war against the state"-- crimes which carry a possible death penalty or life in prison. USCIRF says:
Revs. [Yat] Michael and [Peter] Reith, both of South Sudanese origin, belong to the Presbyterian Evangelical Church Khartoum Bahri congregation. The congregation has brought a legal case against Sudanese authorities to stop the illegal sale of church land by Sudanese authorities to a Muslim businessman. The National Intelligence Security Services (NISS) detained Rev. Michael in December 2014, after recording him urging parishioners at a church service to continue standing firm through the trials they were experiencing. The same month, authorities partially destroyed the church and arrested 37 congregants. Rev. Reith was detained in January 2015. Both pastors were held at an undisclosed location and were not granted access to lawyers and family until March 1.The defendants are also charged with insulting religious beliefs, breach of the public peace, arousing feelings of discontent among the regular forces and disclosure of official information.
Church Sues Over Zoning Restrictions That Are Forcing It To Move
The San Diego Reader reports on a lawsuit filed May 28 by the San Diego Christian Worship Center against the city challenging zoning restrictions that will force the church to relocate in September. The city granted the church a 5-year conditional use permit in 2010, and the church made $700,000 of improvements to its site. In 2014 the city changed the zoning in the area to "prime industrial," which does not allow churches, and the city says it will not renew the conditional use permit. The church lacks the resources to find a new building. Apparently the complaint contends that the new zoning designation, which excludes instructional studios and entertainment venues as well as churches, amounts to a prior restraint on First Amendment expression. The church also claims-- presumably invoking RLUIPA-- that the cost of preparing an application every 5 years to renew its conditional use permit imposes a substantial burden on its exercise of religion. It will cost $50,000 to $100,000 to prepare the application, which must include an environmental impact statement.
Labels:
Free speech,
RLUIPA
Monday, June 01, 2015
Supreme Court Rules Against Abercrombie In Title VII Religious Accommodation Case
In Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Abercrombie & Fitch Stores, Inc., (Sup. Ct., June 1, 2015), the U.S. Supreme Court today reversed the 10th Circuit's holding on when employers must offer a reasonable accommodation for an employee's religious practices. The 10th Circuit had held that Abercrombie & Fitch did not violate Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act when it failed to reasonably accommodate Samantha Elauf's need to wear a headscarf because Elauf had not informed the company that she wore the hijab for religious reasons and would need an accommodation. (See prior posting.) In an opinion by Justice Scalia, 7 justices held:
Justice Thomas dissented, arguing that Abercrombie's actions did not amount to disparate treatment (or intentional discrimination):
Motive and knowledge are separate concepts. An employer who has actual knowledge of the need for an accommodation does not violate Title VII by refusing to hire an applicant if avoiding that accommodation is not his motive. Conversely, an employer who acts with the motive of avoiding accommodation may violate Title VII even if he has no more than an unsubstantiated suspicion that accommodation would be needed.
Thus, the rule for disparate-treatment claims based on a failure to accommodate a religious practice is straightforward: An employer may not make an applicant’s religious practice, confirmed or otherwise, a factor in employment decisions....
A request for accommodation, or the employer’s certainty that the practice exists, may make it easier to infer motive, but is not a necessary condition of liability.Justice Alito concurred only in the judgment, urging a different test for liability. He concluded that Abercrombie is liable only if it had knowledge that Elauf wore her headscarf for religious reasons, but that there was sufficient evidence that Abercrombie had such knowledge that the court should not have granted summary judgment to defendants.
Justice Thomas dissented, arguing that Abercrombie's actions did not amount to disparate treatment (or intentional discrimination):
Abercrombie refused to create an exception to its neutral Look Policy for Samantha Elauf ’s religious practice of wearing a headscarf.... In doing so, it did not treat religious practices less favorably than similar secular practices, but instead remained neutral with regard to religious practices. To be sure, the effects of Abercrombie’s neutral Look Policy, absent an accommodation, fall more harshly on those who wear headscarves as an aspect of their faith. But that is a classic case of an alleged disparate impact.Politico reports on the decision.
Labels:
EEOC,
Reasonable accommodation,
Title VII
District Court Applies Hobby Lobby To Auto Dealership
In Holland v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, (D WV, May 29, 2015), a West Virginia federal district court, applying the Supreme Court's Hobby Lobby ruling, issued a permanent injunction barring federal authorities from enforcing the Affordable Care Act contraceptive coverage requirement, as in effect June 30, 2014, against a West Virginia auto dealership. The complaint (full text) in the case was brought by Joe Holland Chevrolet, Inc., a closely-held corporation, and its 91% owner who became a born-again Christian in 1996. Joe Holland objects to providing coverage for Plan B and ella, contraceptives that he considers abortifacients. Charleston Daily Mail reports on the decision. Liberty Institute issued a press release on the decision.
Turkey's Constitutional Court Invalidates Ban On Religious Marriage Without Civil Certificate
Anadolu Agency and Hurriyet Daily News report on the May 27 decision by Turkey's Constitutional Court striking down Sec. 230 paragraphs 5 and 6 of the Turkish Criminal Code that prohibit arranging or conducting a religious marriage ceremony without obtaining a civil marriage as well. Four of the 16 judges dissented. Stressing the constitutional protection for freedom of religion and conscience, the court majority said that since it is legal for couples to live together without being married at all, equal treatment requires allowing couples to live together with only a religious ceremony. Reacting, officials expressed concern that the decision will encourage the illegal marrying off of children and the erosion of the position of women. The case arose when a lower court in Erzurum province referred a case to the Constitutional Court instead of convicting an imam and the couple he married.
Kansas Catholic School Sued Over Child Neglect Report
Saturday's Kansas City Star reported on a lawsuit filed in Johnson County, Kansas state court last month against the Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City, Sacred Heart Catholic Church and its school principal. Plaintiff Melissa Schroeder claims that she told the school her 10-year old daughter was suffering significant health problems from ongoing bullying. Instead of resolving the problem, the suit alleges that school officials filed a false report with the state child welfare agency claiming abuse and neglect, reporting that the child's mother falsified the child's medical documents and had requested an exorcism for her daughter.
Labels:
Catholic
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
- Gabor Halmai, Religion and Constitutionalism, (MTA Working Paper No. 2015/05 (May 2015)).
- Elizabeth Pollman, Corporate Law and Theory in Hobby Lobby, (Forthcoming in The Rise of Corporate Religous Liberty (Zoë Robinson, Chad Flanders & Micah Schwartzman, eds., Oxford University Press 2015)).
- Michael John DeBoer, Legislating Morality Progressively -- The Contraceptive Coverage Mandate, Religious Freedom, and Public Health Policy and Ethics, (Journal of Law and Health, Vol. 28, p. 62, 2015).
- Doug Coulson, British Imperialism, the Indian Independence Movement, and the Racial Eligibility Provisions of the Naturalization Act: United States v. Thind Revisited, (Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 7 (2015): 1-42).
- Timothy Zick, First Amendment Cosmopolitanism, Skepticism, and Democracy, (Ohio State Law Journal, Vol. 76, No. 3, 2015).
- Margaret M. Blair & Elizabeth Pollman, The Derivative Nature of Corporate Constitutional Rights, (56 William & Mary Law Review 1563 (2015).
- Noel Cox, Justice, Fairness and the Common Law: The Tort of Misfeasance in Public Office, (May 26, 2015).
- Michael J. Perry, On the Constitutionality and Political Morality of Granting Conscience-Protecting Exemptions Only to Religious Believers, (Emory Public Law Research Paper No. 15-356 (May 2015)).
- John D. Inazu, Introduction: Confident Pluralism: Surviving and Thriving Through Deep Difference, (in J. Inazu, Confident Pluralism: Surviving and Thriving Through Deep Difference, University of Chicago Press, 2016, Forthcoming).
- Ellen D. Katz, Dignity and Discriminatory Intent: What the Marriage Equality Cases Tell Us About Voter ID, (University of Chicago Legal Forum, Forthcoming).
Labels:
Articles of interest
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Muslim Interfaith Advocate Charges United Airlines With Discrimination
CNN reports that Tahera Ahmad, the 31-year old Muslim chaplain and director of interfaith engagement at Northwestern University is charging that United Airlines discriminated against her on a flight Friday from Chicago to Washington. Wearing a hijab (headscarf), she was on her way to attend a conference promoting dialogue between Israeli and Palestinian youth. Ahmed asked the flight attendant for an unopened can of Diet Coke, but was told: "We are unauthorized to give unopened cans to people because they may use it as a weapon on the plane." However the flight attendant gave the passenger next to Ahmad an unopened can of beer. As reported by CNN:
When Ahmad told the flight attendant she was being discriminated against, the attendant abruptly opened the beer can. "It's so you don't use it as a weapon," Ahmad said she was told. Shocked, Ahmad asked other passengers if they had seen what happened. A man sitting across the aisle turned to her and yelled, "You Muslim, you need to shut the f--- up," she said. "What?" The man leaned over, looked her in the eyes and said: "Yes, you know you would use it as a weapon. So shut the f--- up"....The flight attendant as well as the pilot later apologized. Ahmed has Premier frequent flier status with United. United said: "We are ... discussing the matter ... with Shuttle America, our regional partner that operated the flight. We look forward to speaking with Ms. Ahmad and hope to have the opportunity to welcome her back."
Labels:
Islamophobia
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Grief v. Ask-Carlson, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66653 (ED NY, May 21, 2015), a New York federal district court dismissed with leave to amend an inmate's claim that he needs two stuffed animals to use in his practice of meditation that is part of his quest for spiritual enlightenment.
In Allah v. Wade, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66690 (ED NC, May 20, 2015), a North Carolina federal district court dismissed an inmate's claim that his religious material was seized and declared contraband and non-religious.
In Shabazz v. Lokey, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67051 (WD VA, May 22, 2015), a Virginia federal district court permitted an inmate to move ahead with his claim that his Nation of Islam materials were seized and wrongly declared to be gang-related "Five Percenter" documents.
In Aytch v. Cox, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67180 (D NV, May 21, 2015), a Nevada federal district court granted a Muslim inmate a preliminary injunction ordering prison officials to provide him with a diet that complies with both the tenets of his Muslim faith and his low sodium medical needs.
In Quinn v. Management & Training Corp., 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68388 (SD MS, May 4, 2015), a Mississippi federal magistrate judge recommended that an inmate's claim that officials refused to recognize Voodoo as his religion and to allow him access to written religious materials be dismissed as abandoned by plaintiff at the hearing.
In Winston v. Gray, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69388 (ED MO, May 29, 2015), a Missouri federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that he is being denied kosher meals because he failed to comply with the court's discovery order.
In Sessing v. Beard, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69916 (ED CA, May 28, 2015), a California federal magistrate judge vacated his earlier findings and recommendation to dismiss and gave plaintiff 30 days to file a new complaint alleging that Asatru/Odinists were arbitrarily denied access to the Native American fire pit and to a suitable worship area.
In Wahid v. Cruzen, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70036 (ND CA, May 28, 2015), a California federal district court allowed a Muslim inmate to proceed with his claim for nominal and punitive damages for authorities' interrupting Muslim congregational prayer on one day.
In Allah v. Wade, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66690 (ED NC, May 20, 2015), a North Carolina federal district court dismissed an inmate's claim that his religious material was seized and declared contraband and non-religious.
In Shabazz v. Lokey, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67051 (WD VA, May 22, 2015), a Virginia federal district court permitted an inmate to move ahead with his claim that his Nation of Islam materials were seized and wrongly declared to be gang-related "Five Percenter" documents.
In Aytch v. Cox, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67180 (D NV, May 21, 2015), a Nevada federal district court granted a Muslim inmate a preliminary injunction ordering prison officials to provide him with a diet that complies with both the tenets of his Muslim faith and his low sodium medical needs.
In Quinn v. Management & Training Corp., 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68388 (SD MS, May 4, 2015), a Mississippi federal magistrate judge recommended that an inmate's claim that officials refused to recognize Voodoo as his religion and to allow him access to written religious materials be dismissed as abandoned by plaintiff at the hearing.
In Winston v. Gray, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69388 (ED MO, May 29, 2015), a Missouri federal district court dismissed an inmate's complaint that he is being denied kosher meals because he failed to comply with the court's discovery order.
In Sessing v. Beard, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69916 (ED CA, May 28, 2015), a California federal magistrate judge vacated his earlier findings and recommendation to dismiss and gave plaintiff 30 days to file a new complaint alleging that Asatru/Odinists were arbitrarily denied access to the Native American fire pit and to a suitable worship area.
In Wahid v. Cruzen, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70036 (ND CA, May 28, 2015), a California federal district court allowed a Muslim inmate to proceed with his claim for nominal and punitive damages for authorities' interrupting Muslim congregational prayer on one day.
Labels:
Prisoner cases
Lack of Judges Creates Huge Backlog In Israel's Highest Religious Court
Haaretz reported last week on the paralysis in Israel's Rabbinical Court because of the partisan fighting that has prevented the appointment of new judges by the committee charged with doing so. The High Rabbinical Court is the highest appellate court in the religious court system that handles personal status issues-- especially divorces. Four urgent appeals will finally be heard this week, but the court faces a backlog of 2900 other cases. Six permanent judges are need for the High Rabbinical Court and 25 are needed for regional religious courts. (See prior related posting.)
UPDATE: Jerusalem Post reports that on Monday June 1, Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked approved the temporary appointment, for a period of 6 months, of three new judges to the High Rabbinical Court.
UPDATE: Jerusalem Post reports that on Monday June 1, Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked approved the temporary appointment, for a period of 6 months, of three new judges to the High Rabbinical Court.
District Court Modifies, But Will Not Dissolve, Injunction Barring Sectarian Invocations
In Hudson v. Pittsylvania County, Virginia, (WD VA, May 28, 2015), a Virginia federal district court modified, but refused to dissolve, its prior injunction (issued before the Supreme Court's Town of Greece decision) barring sectarian prayer at Pittsylvania County's Board of Supervisors meetings. The court said in part:
By opening its meetings with prayers led by Board members, the Supervisors of Pittsylvania County determined the content of the prayers offered at Board meetings and did so by consistently referencing the tenets of one denomination. In so doing, the Board involved itself “in religious matters to a far greater degree” than was the case in Town of Greece.... Moreover, by delivering the prayers to the assembled public and asking them to stand for the prayers, the Board members “directed the public to participate in the prayers.”... Finally, because the Board itself determined the content of the Pittsylvania County prayers, persons of other faiths had no opportunity to offer opening prayers in their faith traditions. As such, the Supreme Court’s decision in Town of Greece was decided on very different facts, and its decision does not alter the conclusion that the prayer practice of the Board of Supervisors of Pittsylvania County violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.
While the injunction in this case will be modified to eliminate any suggestion that legislative prayer must be nonsectarian, the Board’s exclusive practice of determining the content of and leading the citizens of Pittsylvania County in prayer associated with one faith tradition at the opening of Board meetings will remain enjoined.Last August the district court had issued an opinion expressing a similar conclusion (see prior posting), but refused to modify the injunction then because it concluded it did not have jurisdiction to do so until the 4th Circuit to which the case had been appealed granted at least a limited remand. In December, the 4th Circuit dismissed the appeal finding that it was untimely. (See prior posting.)
Labels:
Legislative Prayer,
Virginia
Saturday, May 30, 2015
8th Circuit Upholds Missouri's Blaine Amendments Against 1st and 14th Amendment Attack
In Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Inc.v. Pauley, (8th Cir., May 29, 2015), the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, rejected arguments that Missouri's Blaine Amendments violate the free exercise, establishment and equal protection clauses of the federal Constitution. At issue was the refusal by Missouri's Department of Natural Resources of a grant application by Trinity Church for a Playground Scrap Tire Surface Material Grant that would allow it to resurface a playground at its day care and preschool facility on church premises. In refusing the grant, the Department pointed to Missouri Constitution, Art. I Sec. 7, that prohibits public funds from being spent "in aid of any church, section or denomination of religion." The majority said in part:
Trinity Church seeks an unprecedented ruling -- that a state constitution violates the First Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause if it bars the grant of public funds to a church. To prevail, Trinity Church must clear a formidable if not insurmountable hurdle, what appears to be controlling adverse precedent.Judge Gruender dissented, saying that Trinity Church has sufficiently pleaded a Free Exercise violation.
Labels:
Blaine Amendments
Friday, May 29, 2015
British Education Officials Launch Investigation of Jewish Schools Over Women's Driving Ban
The Guardian reports today that Britain's Department of Education is launching an investigation into an order issued by the Jewish Hasidic Belz sect that operates two schools in North London. The sect's order bans women from driving their children to school-- saying (as reported in a second Guardian article) that women's driving violates "the traditional rules of modesty in our camp." The decision was made upon the advice of the Belzer spiritual leader in Israel. A letter to school parents said that beginning in August, children driven to school by their mothers would be turned away. A special committee will consider requests for exceptions for medical and similar reasons. Education Secretary Nicky Morgan (who is also minister for women and equalities) said:
This is completely unacceptable in modern Britain. If schools do not actively promote the principle of respect for other people they are breaching the independent school standards. Where we are made aware of such breaches we will investigate and take any necessary action to address the situation.”UPDATE: A June 4 report by JTA indicates that the schools have backed off. The schools' CEO said that the letter had not been seen in advance by the schools' board and that "women have a choice about whether they want to drive or not, and our policy is to accept all children who are members of our community..."
North Carolina Governor Vetoes Bill Allowing Magistrates To Refuse To Perform Same-Sex Marriages
As reported by The Advocate, yesterday North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory, a Republican, announced he would veto Senate Bill 2 (full text), which was sent to him earlier in the day by the state legislature. The bill provides that individual magistrates have the right to recuse themselves from performing all lawful marriages based on any sincerely held religious beliefs and that individual register of deeds personnel similarly may opt out of issuing marriage licenses. The Governor in a statement said (full text):
I recognize that for many North Carolinians, including myself, opinions on same-sex marriage come from sincerely held religious beliefs that marriage is between a man and a woman. However, we are a nation and a state of laws. Whether it is the president, governor, mayor, a law enforcement officer, or magistrate, no public official who voluntarily swears to support and defend the Constitution and to discharge all duties of their office should be exempt from upholding that oath; therefore, I will veto Senate Bill 2.According to WITN News, a half hour after issuing the statement, he formally vetoed the bill. In North Carolina, the Administrative Office of the Courts had previously issued a memo to judges and magistrates stating that magistrates must perform wedding ceremonies for same-sex couples who present a license in the same way they do for opposite-sex couples, and magistrates have filed suit challenging the absence of a religious liberty exception. (See prior posting.) The Gaston Gazette has reactions from various state legislators to the governor's veto.
Provocative Draw Muhammad Contest and Rally Planned In Phoenix Today
A provocative rally is set for this evening in Phoenix, Arizona outside the Phoenix Islamic Center. KPHO News and Mashable report on the event organized by former Marine Jon Ritzheimer and billed as "Round 2" after the attacks earlier this month on Pamela Geller's "Muhammad Art Exhibit and Contest" in Garland, Texas. (See prior posting.) The two gunmen there were from Phoenix and one had studies at the Phoenix Islamic Center. Today's event, to which bikers are invited, will involve a Muhammad Cartoon Contest with the winner being announced at the rally. The rally will be held at 6:15 pm to coincide with the mosque's Friday prayer services. The Facebook page promoting the rally says in part: "People are also encouraged to utilize there [sic.] second amendment right at this event just incase our first amendment comes under the much anticipated attack."
The KPHO report quotes Ritzheimer who says he knows that the Phoenix Islamic Center has condemned ISIS. But he insists that is not enough. He says: "People call them an extremist; to me it's just a Muslim following their book as it's written.... Unfortunately, we have to hold the cartoon contest, as silly as it sounds, to be able to show the true colors of Islam."
The KPHO report quotes Ritzheimer who says he knows that the Phoenix Islamic Center has condemned ISIS. But he insists that is not enough. He says: "People call them an extremist; to me it's just a Muslim following their book as it's written.... Unfortunately, we have to hold the cartoon contest, as silly as it sounds, to be able to show the true colors of Islam."
Labels:
Islam,
Islamophobia
Group Challenges University Football Coach Leading Players In Lord's Prayer
The Toledo Blade reported Wednesday on a letter (full text) sent by Freedom From Religion Foundation to the president of the University of Toledo (a public university) complaining about a video posted on the University's YouTube channel showing football coach Matt Campbell leading his players in the Lord's Prayer. The video of pre-game activity, apparently shot by a mobile video camera attached to one of the player's helmets, shows the coach calling together the team in the locker room so they can offer the prayer to fire the players up as they are about to run onto the field. The video is from a 2012 game against the school's traditional rival, Bowling Green State University. However the Blade article also features a photo of Coach Campbell leading the team in prayer after a 2015 game. A University spokesman said the school is reviewing FFRF's letter.
Labels:
School prayer
Thursday, May 28, 2015
More Alabama Same-Sex Marriage Developments
Alabama has been "ground zero" for opposition to same-sex marriage. Two more developments help it keep that title. According to the Montgomery Advertiser, in Prattville, Alabama last week, a Unitarian minister pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct charges and was sentenced to six months unsupervised probation and a $250 fine. The charges were filed last February when Anne Susan DiPrizio offered to marry a lesbian couple who had just received a marriage license, planning to conduct the ceremony inside the Autauga County Probate Office. However, the local Probate Judge had stopped all marriages in the office. After DiPrizio refused to leave, sheriff's deputies were called and disorderly conduct charges were filed.
Meanwhile also last week, the Alabama state Senate passed and sent to the state House of Representatives SB 377 (full text) that would end the issuance of marriage licences in the state. Instead a couple would enter a "marriage contract" containing specified information and would record that contract in the office of the county probate court. If and when same-sex marriage becomes legal in Alabama, this procedure eliminates the issue of whether a probate court employee who objects to same-sex marriage must issue a license to a same-sex couple. The bill's sponsor defines the bill's purpose more broadly, saying: "When you invite the state into those matters of personal or religious import, it creates difficulties." (Yellowhammer News, 4/30/15).
Meanwhile also last week, the Alabama state Senate passed and sent to the state House of Representatives SB 377 (full text) that would end the issuance of marriage licences in the state. Instead a couple would enter a "marriage contract" containing specified information and would record that contract in the office of the county probate court. If and when same-sex marriage becomes legal in Alabama, this procedure eliminates the issue of whether a probate court employee who objects to same-sex marriage must issue a license to a same-sex couple. The bill's sponsor defines the bill's purpose more broadly, saying: "When you invite the state into those matters of personal or religious import, it creates difficulties." (Yellowhammer News, 4/30/15).
Labels:
Alabama,
Same-sex marriage
French Court Fines Salafist For Disturbing Mosque
AP reported yesterday that a court in France has handed a victory to a small mosque in Lyon that filed a complaint with authorities about a Salafist member of the mosque who has been disruptive. The mosque invoked a provision in France's 1905 law on secularism that provides legal recourse against a person who interferes with the ability to express freedom of conscience. It filed a complaint against Faouzi Saidi who in 2014 criticized the imam, held parallel prayer services and preached his ultraconservative Salafi views to Muslim converts. The court fined Saidi 1500 Euros, with 500 Euros suspended.
Suit Challenges Middle School Field Trip To Christian Sports Complex
The American Humanist Association announced yesterday that it had filed a lawsuit against the Joplin, Missouri public school system challenging a middle-school field trip to a Christian sports complex. The complaint (full text) in Doe v. Huff, (WD MO, filed 5/27/2015), alleges that the middle school's policy of scheduling student field trips to Victory Ministry and Sports Complex violates the Establishment Clause. The suit seeks an injunction and punitive damages.
Labels:
Religion in schools
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Church's Suit Against Chase and JPMorgan Dismissed In Part, With Leave To Replead
In Rector, Wardens, and Vestrymen of Christ Church Cathedral of Indianapolis v. JPMorgan Chase and Company, (SD IN, May 21, 2015), an Indiana federal district court dismissed with leave to replead constructive fraud claims against Chase Bank and its parent JPMorgan brought by Christ Church Cathedral that lost some $13.5 million from trusts that had been set up to benefit it under the will of Eli Lilly. The church alleged that the trustee bought complex structured notes and proprietary hedge funds that lost money but resulted in increased fees for the trustee. The court held that the church had not stated its claims with sufficient particularity, lumping together various defendants and failing to indicate what decisions the church made in reliance on alleged misrepresentations. The court dismissed the state securities law claim without leave to replead it. It did not dismiss a breach of trust claim against Chase Bank. Indianapolis Star, reporting on the decision, quotes the church's attorney who says that amended pleadings will be filed.
Labels:
Fraud
Suit Claims High School Extensively Promotes Evangelical Christianity Through Activities With Church
A Jewish teacher in a southern Colorado school district filed suit yesterday in federal district court alleging that the Florence, Colorado High School extensively promotes evangelical Christian activities through arrangements with a church, The Cowboy Church at Crossroads. The complaint (full text) in Basevitz v. Fremont RE-2 Schol District, (D CO, filed 5/26/2015), alleges in part:
The Cowboy Church at Crossroads is lead by Pastor Randy Pfaff, and meets every Sunday in the cafeteria of the School. The Church is advertised by two large signs that are hung on school property and are clearly visible to motorists....
The cornerstone of Pastor Pfaff and the Church’s “mission work” at the School is daily morning prayer in front of the School, at the flagpole. Either Pastor Pfaff or another member of the Church has been present for this ceremony every day for the last three years. With the School’s support, Pastor Pfaff has led these services, ministering to the School’s students and staff while holding a bible and using a public address system to preach his evangelical Christian messages.... Numerous faculty members, in including Principal Schipper, participate in services.....
... Pastor Pfaff and the Church, with the support of the School’s administration, routinely minister to staff and students through the distribution of flyers promoting their evangelical Christian views...
Through the Fellowship’s front group, Pastor Pfaff and the Church also hold weekly lunches at the School. The students refer to this event as “Jesus Pizza.” This meeting is promoted to the School’s students and staff through the presence of a large sign in the hallway that reads “God loves you and has a plan for your life. Jeremiah 29:11.” .... During these “Jesus Pizza” sessions, which are led by Pastor Pfaff, he preaches to and prays with Florence students....Denver Post reports on the lawsuit.
Labels:
Religion in schools
Court Defers To Ecclesiastical Decision In Church Control Lawsuit
Kim v. The True Church Members of the Holy Hill Community Church, (Cal. App., May 21, 2015), involves a dispute between two factions of a Los Angeles congregation that was part of a presbytery of the Korean American Presbytery Church. The congregation owns valuable property on Los Angeles' Sunset Boulevard. The dispute involved attempts by one faction to excommunicate members of the other and an attempt to withdraw the congregation from the parent church body. The California state appeals court affirmed the trial court's decision deferring to the determination by the parent body of the congregation.
Labels:
California,
Ecclesiastical abstention
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Legalization of Same-Sex Marriage Complicates Prior Estate Planning Devices
A New York Times article six years ago reported on the use of adult adoption as an estate planning tool for same-sex couples who were prohibited by law from marrying. The technique allows a same-sex partner to share as a beneficiary in a family trust to which the person would not be entitled if not a family member. Last week the Doylestown-Buckingham-New Britain Patch reported on how this kind of arrangement has fared as same-sex marriage becomes legal in many states. Bill Novak and Norman MacArthur are a same-sex couple who have been together for more than 50 years and were registered as domestic partners in New York City. When they moved to Pennsylvania, their lawyer advised them to use the adoption strategy for estate planning purposes. So in 2000, Novak adopted MacArthur. But now that same-sex marriage is permitted in Pennsylvania, the two would like to marry. However this required vacating the adoption decree. In a precedent-setting decision on May 14, the Orphans Court of Bucks County granted their Petition to Vacate, and the couple applied for and received a marriage license the same day. They expect to actually marry soon.
Labels:
Pennsylvania,
Same-sex marriage
Another Decision Invalidating Alabama's Same-Sex Marriage Ban
In Alabama last week, a federal district court took another step toward requiring all counties to issue licenses for same-sex marriages. A federal district court had already issued an injunction against the attorney general and one state probate judge requiring them to issue marriage licenses to same sex-couples. (See prior posting.) Now in Strawser v. Strange (Doc. 122), (SD AL, May 21, 2015), the same federal district court permitted plaintiffs to turn the case into a class action against "all Alabama county probate judges who are enforcing or in the future may enforce Alabama’s laws barring the issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples and refusing to recognize their marriages." It also certified as a plaintiff class "all persons in Alabama who wish to obtain a marriage license in order to marry a person of the same sex and to have that marriage recognized under Alabama law, and who are unable to do so because of the enforcement of Alabama’s laws prohibiting the issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples and barring recognition of their marriages."
Then in a second opinion the same day, Strawser v. Strange (Doc. 123), (SD AL, May 21, 2015), the court again held that Alabama's marriage laws that prohibit and refuse to recognize same-sex marriages violated the equal protection and due process clauses of the 14th Amendment. It granted plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction, but stayed it until the U.S. Supreme Court issues its opinion in Obergefell v. Hodges, expected within the next several weeks. Christian Science Monitor reports on the decision.
Then in a second opinion the same day, Strawser v. Strange (Doc. 123), (SD AL, May 21, 2015), the court again held that Alabama's marriage laws that prohibit and refuse to recognize same-sex marriages violated the equal protection and due process clauses of the 14th Amendment. It granted plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction, but stayed it until the U.S. Supreme Court issues its opinion in Obergefell v. Hodges, expected within the next several weeks. Christian Science Monitor reports on the decision.
Labels:
Alabama,
Same-sex marriage
Recent Articles of Interest
From SSRN:
From SSRN (Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion Symposium, Vol. 16, 2015).
From SSRN (Marriage):
From SmartCILP and elsewhere:
- Steven H. Resnicoff, J. David Bleich: An Intellectual Portrait, (in Hava Tirosh-Samuelson and Aaron W. Hughes (eds), J. David Bleich: Where Halakhah and Philsophy Meet (Brill Academic Publishers, Forthcoming).
- Carl H. Esbeck, Third-Party Harms, Congressional Statutes Accommodating Religion, and the Establishment Clause, (University of Missouri School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2015-10, May 2015).
- Natasha Bakht & Jordan Palmer, Modern Law, Modern Hammers: Canada's Witchcraft Provision as an Image of Persecution, ((2015) 35 Windsor Review of Legal and Social Issues 123).
- Eliav Lieblich, Assimilation Through Law: Hans Kelsen and the Jewish Experience, (The Law of Strangers: Critical Perspectives on Jewish Lawyering and International Legal Thought (James Loeffler & Moria Paz eds., Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming)).
- Michael Heise, Lost Ground: Catholic Schools, the Future of Urban School Reform, and Empirical Legal Scholarship, (Texas Law Review, Vol. 93, 2015).
- Antonios E. Kouroutakis, Islamic Terrorism: The Legal Impact on the US and Europe, (Boston University International Law Journal, Vol. 34, 2016 Forthcoming).
- Elizabeth Sepper, Healthcare Exemptions and the Future of Corporate Religious Liberty, (The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty (Oxford University Press, Chad Flanders, Zoe Robinson & Micah Schwartzman, eds. 2015, Forthcoming)).
- Elizabeth Deutsch, Expanding Conscience, Shrinking Care: The Crisis in Access to Reproductive Care and the Affordable Care Act's Nondiscrimination Mandate, (Yale Law Journal, Vol. 124, No. 7, 2015).
From SSRN (Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion Symposium, Vol. 16, 2015).
- Roberta Rosenthal Kwall, Introduction - People of the Book: Judaism's Influence on American Legal Scholarship.
- Margo Schlanger, Against Solitary Confinement: Jonah's Redemption and Our Need for Mercy.
- Susan A. Bandes, Civil Liberties and the 'Imaginative Sustenance' of Jewish Culture.
- Roberta Rosenthal Kwall, Reinvention with Authenticity: A New Journey on a Familiar Road.
From SSRN (Marriage):
- Kevin H. Govern, Fidelity and Fairness in Marital Commitments, Covenants, and Contractual Relationships: Mulieris Dignitatem's Wisdom, (in American Law from a Catholic Perspective: Through a Clearer Lens, Ronald Rychlak Ed., Rowman & Littlefield (April 2015)).
- Mae Kuykendall, Marriage Goals and Government Interests: Handling Complexity, Apportioning Expertise, Using Federalism, (May 20, 2015).
- R. Anthony Reese, Be Careful Where You Live When You Die: Termination of Copyright Transfers and the Road to Marriage Equality, (IP Theory, Forthcoming, 2015).
From SmartCILP and elsewhere:
- Jeremy A. Rovinsky, The Cutting Edge: The Debate Over Regulation of Ritual Slaughter in the Western World, [Abstract], 45 California Western International Law Journal 79-107 (2014).
- Politics of Religious Freedom. Introduction by Peter Danchin, Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, Saba Mahmood and Elizabeth Shakman Hurd; articles by Ratna Kapur, Heather Miller Rubens, Peter Danchin, Louis Blond, Tamir Moustafa, Waheeda Amien and Annie Leatt (Dhammamegha). 29 Maryland Journal of International Law 293-547 (2014).
- Philip C. Aka, Shaping Their Better Character: Religion In African American Politics In the Age of Obama, 16 Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion 1-70 (2014).
- Mairaj Syed, Compulsion in Islamic Law, Entry in Oxford Encyclopedia of Islamic Law, Academia.edu 2015.
Labels:
Articles of interest
Appeals Court Affirms Decision On Ownership of Buddhist Pagoda
As reported by the Salt Lake Tribune, in Dao Trang Phap Hoa v. Vietnamese Unified Buddhist Association of Utah, (UT App., May 21, 2015), a Utah state appeals court upheld a trial court's decision that a Salt Lake City Buddhist temple-- the Pho Quang Pagoda-- is owned by a local affiliate of the California-based Vietnamese-American Unified Buddhist Congress. Some members of the temple claimed that the Congress held the Pagoda in trust for the local Vietnamese Buddhist Alliance Society of Utah. The appeals court held that even if there were questions of fact on that issue, the plaintiff in this case, the Vietnamese Unified Buddhist Association of Utah, lacked standing to assert the claim on behalf of the Society because the two groups are separate corporations, even though they have overlapping membership.
Labels:
Buddhist,
Church property,
Utah
Texas Passes Bill To Protect Clergy and Religious Groups That Object To Same-Sex Marriage
Anticipating the U.S. Supreme Court's upcoming decision on marriage equality, the Texas legislature last week gave final passage and sent to the governor for his signature S.B. No. 2065 (full text) to protect clergy and religious groups who object to same-sex marriage. The bill provides:
UPDATE: Gov. Greg Abbott signed SB 2065 on June 11. (Austin Standard-Times).
A religious organization, an organization supervised or controlled by or in connection with a religious organization, an individual employed by a religious organization while acting in the scope of that employment, or a clergy or minister may not be required to solemnize any marriage or provide services, accommodations, facilities, goods, or privileges for a purpose related to the solemnization, formation, or celebration of any marriage if the action would cause the organization or individual to violate a sincerely held religious belief.It goes on to provide that this shields the organization and individuals against civil or criminal claims or governmental denial of benefits. Last Friday's Dallas Morning News, reporting on the legislature's action, also reported that a separate bill designed to impede issuance of same-sex marriage licenses by county clerks will not move ahead this session.
UPDATE: Gov. Greg Abbott signed SB 2065 on June 11. (Austin Standard-Times).
Labels:
Same-sex marriage,
Texas
Pro Se Plaintiff Challenges Teaching of Evolution In West Virginia Schools
A pro se lawsuit was filed in a West Virginia federal district court earlier this month challenging the teaching of evolution in West Virginia's public schools. The complaint (full text) in Smith v. Jefferson County Board of Education, (ND WV, filed 5/12/2015) contends that school officials and various federal officials are propagating a religious faith by fostering the teaching evolution in the state's schools. Reporting on the lawsuit, the National Center for Science Education says that plaintiff is the author of a book titled The True Origin of Man.
Labels:
Evolution,
West Virginia
Monday, May 25, 2015
Court Orders Another Election For Small Church's Board
In Rock Church, Inc. v. Venigalla, (NY York Co. Sup. Ct., May 14, 2015), a New York state trial court rejected a challenge to its jurisdiction over a disputed election in a small church whose some 30 members were split over whether to fire its pastor after his decision to reduce the number of Sunday services from two to one. The court had previously ordered that a meeting be held to elect a full Board. This suit challenges the validity of that election in which the faction opposing the pastor was voted into office after a third vote at which the pastor's supporters claim numerous non-members voted. The court said in part:
If this matter required the a weighing of an individual's fitness for membership in the Church, and a decision as to whether or not that individual met the criteria for membership, including investigation into the depth of his or her religious convictions, it would be clear that the matter would be beyond this court's subject matter jurisdiction. But, the matter actually turns on a matter of contract. In the present matter, through its by-laws, the Church's contract as to how the Church will conduct its business, the Church has already decided how members are to be determined. Under the Church's by-laws, it is up to the pastor, and only the pastor, to determine who is to be a member of the Church....
Since Pastor Impaglia ... attests that the third vote taken on October 5, 2014, was taken largely among nonmembers, who cannot vote for trustees, it follows that the final vote taken on October 5, 2014, which put respondents in power, was illegal under the Church's By-Laws, and is void. As said, the matter is one of pure contract interpretation, and therefore involves only the application by this court of a "neutral principle of law."The court held that another vote held the same day purporting to elect the pastor's supporters was also void, and ordered the church to hold another special meeting.
Labels:
Ecclesiastical abstention,
New York
Official Results and Reactions To Ireland's Marriage Equality Referendum
The official results of Ireland's referendum last Friday (see prior posting) that approved same-sex marriage was 62.07% yes and 37.93% no. (60.52% of the voters turned out for the election,) In a speech on Saturday (full text) welcoming the result, Ireland's Prime Minister Enda Kenny said in part:
So – the people went to the polls. It passed. The answer is YES. Yes to their future. Yes to their love. Yes to their equal marriage. That yes is heard loudly across the living world as a sound of pioneering leadership of our people and hopefully across the generations of gay men and women born as we say, before their time.In an inteview on Saturday (full text) ith Vatican Insider, Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin said in part:
The Church needs to ask itself when this cultural revolution began and why some of its members refused to see this change. There also needs to be a review of youth pastoral care: the referendum was won with young people’s votes and 90% of young people who voted “yes” to the motion, attended Catholic schools....
An individualistic idea of the family prevails. The concept of marriage as a fundamental element of social cohesion has been lost. A reasoning based on respect for the rights of the individual is more successful than one based on social ethics.
Labels:
Ireland,
Same-sex marriage
Friday, May 22, 2015
Obama Addresses Synagogue For Jewish American Heritage Month [corrected]
President Obama this morning delivered a 30-minute address (full text) at Adas Israel Congregation in Washington, D.C. to mark Jewish Heritage Month. Here is an excerpt from his wide-ranging speech:
Now, I wanted to come here to celebrate Jewish American Heritage Month because this congregation, like so many around the country, helps us to tell the American story. And back in 1876, when President Grant helped dedicate Adas Israel, he became the first sitting President in history to attend a synagogue service. And at the time, it was an extraordinarily symbolic gesture -- not just for America, but for the world.
And think about the landscape of Jewish history. Tomorrow night, the holiday of Shavuot marks the moment that Moses received the Torah at Mount Sinai, the first link in a chain of tradition that stretches back thousands of years, and a foundation stone for our civilization. Yet for most of those years, Jews were persecuted -- not embraced -- by those in power. Many of your ancestors came here fleeing that persecution.
The United States could have been merely another destination in that ongoing diaspora. But those who came here found that America was more than just a country. America was an idea. America stood for something. As George Washington wrote to the Jews of Newport, Rhode Island: The United States “gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.”[Correction: Obama spoke to "mark" the event. The typo in an earlier version of the post regrettably suggested something else.]
New Orleans Mayor Issues Executive Order In Opposition To Jindahl's
Two days after Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindahl issued an executive order designed to prevent governmental entities from denying benefits to persons who act in accordance with their religious beliefs in opposition to same-sex marriage (see prior posting), New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu yesterday issued a counter-Executive Order (full text). Landrieu's order was designed to address the backlash to Jindahl's action that threatened tourist, convention and special event business in the state. The heart of Landrieu's order is the purpose clause in Sec. 1:
The purpose of this Executive Order is to confirm for the residents of the City of New Orleans, its businesses and visitors that religious beliefs are protected from unjustified governmental burden, but that there is no tolerance in the City of New Orleans for discrimination on the basis of race, creed, national origin or ancestry, color, religion, gender or sex, sexual orientation, gender identification, marital or domestic partner status, age, physical condition or disability.The Advocate reports on Landrieu's action and points out that New Orleans "has a history of embracing gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender individuals, not only culturally, through Carnival krewes and the annual Southern Decadence festival, but through its laws."
Labels:
Same-sex marriage
Zogby Reappoined To USCIRF
Last week, President Obama announced his intention to reappoint Dr. James J. Zogby to another term on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. Earlier this week, USCIRF issued a press release in which USCIRF Chair Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett welcomed the reappointment.
Labels:
USCIRF
Court Refuses To Allow High School Senior To Wear Eagle Feather On Cap At Graduation
In Griffith v. Caney Valley Public Schools, (ND OK, May 20, 2015), an Oklahoma federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendaiton (full text) and refused to grant a preliminary injunction to high school student Hayden Griffith who wanted to wear an eagle feather on her mortar board tassel at her high school graduation last night. The court rejected Griffith's claim that the school district's ban on cap decorations violates her free speech and free exercise rights and her rights under the Oklahoma Religious Freedom Act (ORFA). Discussing the ORFA claim, the court concluded that Griffith had not shown that the policy substantially burdens her free exercise of religion, saying:
[Griffith] testified that wearing the feather shows her respect for God and for the tribal elder who gave the feather to her, but that failing to attach the feather to her cap would not result in any religious detriment to her. Thus, attaching the feather to her graduation cap would be a personal expression of religious significance to Griffith, but it is not a religiously motivated “practice” ... or an activity that is “fundamental” to her religion.... Nor does the policy prohibiting decorations on graduation caps during the ceremony “meaningfully curtail” her ability to express adherence to her faith..... The policy does not prevent Griffith from attaching the feather to her cap at any time other than the graduation ceremony. She may attach it to her cap it up until she enters the graduation ceremony, and she may affix the feather to her cap immediately after the ceremony. The school superintendent also offered to re-pose for the professional photographer with Griffith wearing her feather on her cap after the ceremony. In sum, Griffith may display the feather as she wishes throughout her celebration of her graduation, other than during the graduation ceremony with her fellow classmates.Tulsa World reported on the decision.
North Carolina Magistrates Sue Over Requirement They Perform Same-Sex Marriages
Yesterday in North Carolina, a magistrate and a former magistrate (who had not been reappointed after 10 years of service) filed suit challenging a memorandum issued by the Administrative Office of the Courts in October requiring all magistrates to conduct same-sex marriage ceremonies in the same manner as any other marriage ceremony. The memorandum was issued to implement federal court rulings striking down the state's same-sex marriage ban. The complaint (full text) in Smoak v. Smith, (NC Super. Ct., filed 5/21/2015) contends that the failure to make exceptions for magistrates with sincerely held religious beliefs opposed to same-sex marriage violates their conscience, religious liberty, free speech, due process and equal protection rights under the North Carolina Constitution. Liberty Counsel issued a press release on the lawsuit.
Labels:
North Carolina,
Same-sex marriage
Thursday, May 21, 2015
DC Circuit Denies En Banc Review of Priests For Life ACA Contraceptive Mandate Challenge
Yesterday in Priests for Life v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, (DC Cir., May 20, 2015), the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a petition for rehearing en banc. In the case, a 3-judge panel upheld the Obama administration's compromise for religious non-profits that object to furnishing contraceptive coverage under the Affordable Care Act. (See prior posting.) While the petition for rehearing failed to garner votes of a majority of the Circuit's judges, three separate opinions on behalf of six different judges were filed along with the per curiam denial.
Judge Brown, dissenting from the denial, joined by Judge Henderson argued
Judge Pillard, joined by Judges Rogers and Wilkins defended their 3-judge panel decision:
Judge Brown, dissenting from the denial, joined by Judge Henderson argued
The panel conceded Plaintiffs sincerely “believe that the regulatory framework makes them complicit in the provision of contraception,” ... That acknowledgement should end our inquiry into the substance of their beliefs.Judge Kavanaugh also dissented from the denial of a rehearing, arguing that the government has a still less restrictive alternative available-- a less restrictive notice of an opt out by the non-profit.
Judge Pillard, joined by Judges Rogers and Wilkins defended their 3-judge panel decision:
the dissenters perceive in Hobby Lobby a potentially sweeping, new RFRA prerogative for religious adherents to make substantial-burden claims based on sincere but erroneous assertions about how federal law works....
RFRA protects religious exercise. In no respect do we, nor could we, question Plaintiffs’ sincere beliefs about what their faith permits and forbids of them. But we can and must decide which party is right about how the law works. We concluded that the regulation challenged in this case does not, as a matter of law or fact, give Plaintiffs’ conduct the contraception-facilitating effect of which they complain.Washington Times reports on the decision.
Labels:
Contraceptive coverage mandate
Some Recent Congressional Actions of Interest
On April 15, the U.S. House of Representatives passed H.R. 1314, a bill that would amend the Internal Revenue Code to assure the right to an administrative appeal for non-profit organizations that are denied tax-exempt status by the IRS. When the bill went to the Senate, it became the vehicle for the high profile trade promotion authority. The May 12 substitute amendment (full text) that added the trade authority provisions, however, eliminated the text of the House language regarding non-profits.
A large number of amendments have been offered on the Senate floor to the trade authority bill. One of those amendments (No. 1237), approved in the Seante on May 18 by a 92-0 vote, adds to the numerous trade negotiating objectives in Sec. 102, the following:
A large number of amendments have been offered on the Senate floor to the trade authority bill. One of those amendments (No. 1237), approved in the Seante on May 18 by a 92-0 vote, adds to the numerous trade negotiating objectives in Sec. 102, the following:
to take into account conditions relating to religious freedom of any party to negotiations for a trade agreement with the United States.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)