Thursday, January 15, 2009

New Jersey Governor Signs Bill Permitting Adjustment of Election Dates

On Monday, New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine signed into law ACS 3186, a bill that permits the dates of municipal elections and school board elections to be adjusted to avoid conflicts with religious holidays. The bill applies to an an election if it "coincides with a period of religious observance that limits significantly the usual activities of the followers of a particular religion or that would result in significant religious consequences for such followers." A press release by Assembly Democrats says the bill was introduced after an Edison (NJ) school bond vote coincided with the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah. [Thanks to Joel Katz for the lead.]

Arkansas Authorities Still Seeking Children From Tony Alamo Ministries

As previously reported, after federal authorities raided the Arkansas compound of Tony Alamo Ministries, Arkansas human services officials began to take a number of children of Alamo's followers into custody. AP reported yesterday that court orders have been issued to take up to 100 children into protective custody, but that Alamo followers have routinely moved the children to churches in other states to evade Arkansas authorities. So far 36 children have been taken into custody, and the father of one of these children has been jailed for contempt when he refused to disclose the location of his other two children. Alamo is charged with taking girls across state lines for purposes of sex. He denies the charges, saying he has acted legally, but does believe that females should be married at puberty to avoid living in sin.

Meanwhile, according to yesterday's Conway (AR) Cabin, Miller County (AR) Circuit Judge Joe Griffin placed a gag order on developments at a custody hearing for 23 children taken from the Ministry. The order was issued after the media gained access to videotapes of interviews of some of the children who had been taken into custody. Alamo Ministries has posted transcripts of September interviews with four girls.

Afghan Newspaper Editor Charged With Blasphemy

AFP reported yesterday that in Afghanistan, the editor of a small Kabul newspaper, Payman Daily, was arrested Tuesday on blasphemy charges. A a council of Islamic clerics and a government media disciplinary commission found that an article the newspaper published was "an insult to Islam." The article, not written by the newspaper staff but was taken from an Afghan website, argued that no religion-- including Islam-- was divinely revealed. The paper, even before the editor's arrest, had apologized for publishing the article. Punishment for blasphemy can range from a reprimand to the death penalty.

Suit Challenges NC Parks Permit Rule

On Monday, Liberty Counsel announced that it is filing a federal lawsuit against the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation challenging the constitutionality of its rule that requires a permit for any meeting, exhibition, ceremony, or speech in a state park. The suit grows out of an incident in which several members of Grace Baptist Church of Wilson (NC) who were picnicking at Fort Macon State Park were told they needed a permit when they shared their religious beliefs with other park visitors. Park officials interpret their rule to require a permit no matter how small the group is that is conducting a meeting or delivering a speech. Liberty Counsel's Matthew Staver said the park rule would even require a permit for a single individual to speak to another person in the park.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Court Rejects RFRA Defense To Endangered Species Indictment

An opinion has just become available on LEXIS in an interesting RFRA case decided some nine months ago. In United States v. Adeyemo, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106330 (ND CA, April 8, 2008), a Nigerian adherent of a Santeria-Catholic tradition, who visits the United States regularly to sell handicraft items, was indicted for violating the Endangered Species Act. A customs inspector discovered that Moses Adeyemo was importing Yoruba wall hangings that are made partly of leopard skins. Defendant moved for dismissal of the indictment under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

The court held that it need not conduct the evidentiary hearing that would be required to decide the sincerity of defendant's religious beliefs, or the burden imposed, because dismissal of the indictment would be unavailable in any event. The court found that the "Government has met its burden under RFRA of demonstrating that the current permitting system for leopard skins, which includes no religious exemption, is the least restrictive means of furthering its compelling interest of conserving and protecting the endangered northern African leopard."

President Declares January 16 As Religious Freedom Day

Yesterday President Bush issued a Proclamation (full text) declaring January 16 as Religious Freedom Day. The day marks the anniversary of the passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom on that date in 1786. The Proclamation says in part:
The United States also stands with religious dissidents and believers from around the globe who practice their faith peacefully. Freedom is not a grant of government or a right for Americans alone; it is the birthright of every man, woman, and child throughout the world. No human freedom is more fundamental than the right to worship in accordance with one's conscience.

New Louisiana Guidelines Implement Science Education Act

A committee of Louisiana's Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) yesterday voted 10-0 to adopt new science guidelines, according to KATC News. The guidelines implement the Louisiana Science Education Act passed last June. The statute allows teachers to use supplemental materials, so long as they do not promote or discriminate against religion. (See prior posting.) The new BESE guidelines do not contain a specific ban on teaching creationism or intelligent design. However they do bar supplemental materials used by teachers from promoting of any religious doctrine and require that the information be "scientifically sound and supported by empirical evidence." Approval of the guidelines by the full Board is a foregone conclusion since the committee's unanimous vote included ten of BESE's eleven members.

Non-Theist Groups Urge Obama To Reject Honorary Presidency of Boy Scouts

Nineteen atheist and humanist groups yesterday sent a letter to President-elect Barack Obama urging him to oppose discrimination against atheists, agnostics, humanists, and other nontheists by declining the title of Honorary President of the Boy Scouts of America. The letter, released in a press release from American Atheists and other groups, says that "The BSA has acted vigorously in recent years to expel atheist and agnostic members and employees." [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Dentist Settles EEOC Suit Charging Him With Imposing Scientology On Employees

Today's Chicago Tribune reports that Chicago dentist James L. Orrington has settled a religious discrimination lawsuit brought against him by the EEOC. The agency charged that he required his employees "to engage in Scientology religious practices and learn about Scientology as conditions of their employment." Orrington was also charged with making inappropriate sexual comments to 18 female employees. In the consent decree filed in U.S. district court, Orrington agreed to pay damages totalling $462,500 and consented to an injunction against further sexual and religious discrimination. (See prior related posting.)

Kyrgyzstan President Signs Controversial New Religion Law

Kyrgyzstan President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Monday signed a repressive new Religion Law according to reports by the Press Association and by Forum 18. The law streamlines government control over religion by banning private religious schools and providing for teaching of religion in public schools. In order to register as a religious group, organizations will need 200 members, instead of the current 10. It bans children being involved in religious organizations. It also prohibits distribution of various kinds of religious material as well as aggressive proselytizing. Human rights groups say that the new law violates international human rights standards. Members of the US Congressional Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe wrote Bakiyev last week objecting to the new law. However, according to the Press Association report: "Kyrgyzstan's main denominations, the Spiritual Administration of Muslims and the Russian Orthodox Church, have backed the changes, which are seen as a government attempt to dispel concern about the influence of foreign evangelical Christians and fear of radical Islamic groups."

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

In Israel, Religion-State Issues In Focus On IDF Soldiers

In Israel, concern about soldiers, particularly those going into combat in Gaza, have resulted in some unusual religion and state questions. The Jerusalem Post reported last week that a unit of the Israeli Defense Force's Rabbinate has prepared 10,000 MP3 files with recorded sermons of encouragement from the country's leading rabbis for distribution to combat soldiers, regardless of the soldiers' religious beliefs. Some critics say the move is a theologizing of warfare. This is part of a trend for the IDF Rabbinate to take over activities normally carried out by the army's Education Division. (See prior related posting.)

The Jerusalem Post also reported last week that in Israel, the secular political party Meretz charged Shas (a religious party) with violations of election laws that prohibit distributing physical gifts or blessings, such as amulets. Shas handed out thousands of flyers carrying pictures of deceased Sephardi rabbinic sages along with a blessing for the soldiers and the Shas logo. Parliamentary elections will be held shortly in Israel. Meretz plans to file a complaint with the Central Election Committee. In the 1996 election, the Central Elections Committee ordered Shas to stop distributing prayers and candles with images of rabbis during the election campaign. (Further background.) [Thanks to Religion and State in Israel for the lead.]

Suit Say HHS Allowed Catholic Agency To Illegally Restrict Use of Human Trafficking Grants

The ACLU of Massachusetts announced yesterday that it has filed a federal lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services alleging that HHS has permitted the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to restrict the use of grant monies given to it under the federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act. On religious grounds, USCCB prohibits its sub-grantees from providing or referring victims of human trafficking for contraceptive or abortion services. The complaint (full text) in ACLU of Massachusetts v. Leavitt, (D MA, filed 1/12/2009), seeks a declaratory judgment that HHS's actions violate the Establishment Clause and asks for a permanent injunction ensuring that the TVPA grant to USCCB is implemented without the imposition of religiously based restrictions. Reporting on the lawsuit, AP yesterday indicates that USCCB has received $6 million in grants under the Act since 2006. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Westboro Baptist Church Files Challenge To Missouri City's Funeral Picketing Law

Last week, Shirley Phelps-Roper, daughter of the founder of the Westboro Baptist Church, filed a lawsuit in a Missouri federal district court challenging the constitutionality of a St. Joseph, Missouri ordinance that bans picketing "in front of or about" a church, cemetery or funeral home within one hour on either side of a funeral ceremony. Westboro Baptist Church members are known for picketing funerals of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans, carrying signs proclaiming that war deaths are divine punishment for U.S. tolerance of homosexuality. The St. Joseph (MO) News-Press, reporting on the case, says that the ordinance was enacted after Westboro members picketed an Iraq veteran's funeral in 2005. The complaint (full text) in Phelps-Roper v. City of St. Joseph, Missouri, (WD MO, filed 1/7/2009), alleges that the St. Joseph ordinance violates the speech, association and free exercise protections of the First amendment.

The complaint reveals an interesting police tactic used by St. Joseph police in 2006. They lined up to block Westboro demonstrators' view of a funeral procession in order to prevent the demonstration from violating the ordinance.

The filing of this lawsuit came just as the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in Phelps-Roper v. Nixon, (8th Cir., Jan. 7, 2009) denied an en banc rehearing in a case that granted a preliminary injunction prohibiting enforcement of the Missouri state funeral picketing law against Westboro Baptist Church members. (See prior related posting.) [Thanks to Steven Sheinberg for the lead.]

NY Regents Committee Approves Hebrew Language Charter School

The New York Times reports that a committee of the New York State Board of Regents voted 8-1 yesterday to approve creation of a state-funded Hebrew Language Academy Charter School in Brooklyn. The school will open with a kindergarten and 1st grade class and will eventually expand through the eighth grade in a school district that includes many Jewish immigrants from Russia and Israel. However the district is predominately black, Hispanic and Asian. The full Board of Regents votes on the proposal today and is expected to approve it. Proponents of the school have worked hard to stay within church-state separation guidelines. They are negotiating with a non-Jewish dual-language expert to serve as principal. The school is backed by philanthropist Michael Steinhart who, in recent years, has given large sums to programs aimed at building Jewish identity in young people.

School District Barred From Promoting Prayer and Religious Activities

In Doe v. School Board for Santa Rosa County, Florida, (ND FL, Jan 9, 2009), a Florida federal district court issued a temporary injunction banning Santa Rosa County schools from promoting prayers during school-sponsored events; sponsoring religious baccalaureate services at schools; holding school-sponsored events at religious venues when other sites are reasonably available; permitting school officials to promote their personal religious beliefs or proselytize students in class or during school-sponsored activities; and otherwise unconstitutionally endorsing or coercing religion. A press release issued yesterday by the Florida ACLU says that the school district has already admitted to the court that religious activities in the schools have violated students' rights.

Chechnya Mandates Islamic Head Scarves In Public Buildings

In the Russian autonomous republic of Chechnya, requiring women at Chechnya's State University in Grozny to wear Islamic headscarves is part of a program by Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov to promote an Islamic revival. Britain's Financial Times reported yesterday that the head scarf requirement applies in all public buildings. Many question whether the requirement violates church-state separation mandated by the Russian Constitution (Art. 14). Kadyrov brushes off questions about the legality of his program, saying: "Chechnya is 100 percent Muslim, and the spiritual revival of the population is essential for the rebuilding of the republic. No one can tell us not to be Muslims. If anyone says I cannot be a Muslim, he is my enemy."

Monday, January 12, 2009

Gene Robinson, Gay Episcopal Bishop, Will Deliver Prayer At Pre-Inaugual Event

Today's Concord (NH) Monitor reports that Episcopal Bishop Gene Robinson has been invited to deliver a prayer at an inaugural kick-off event at the Lincoln Memorial on the Sunday preceding the formal inauguration ceremony for President-Elect Barack Obama. Robinson is the Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop and is a leader in the movement seeking equal rights for gays and lesbians. The invitation to Robinson was announced after continuing criticism from supporters of gay rights over the invitation to Pastor Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at the formal inauguration ceremony. (See prior posting.) Warren has been particularly outspoken in opposition to gay marriage.

Supreme Court Denies Review In City Council Prayer Case

Today the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari in Turner v. City Council of Fredericksburg, (Docket No. 08-518) (Order List). In the case, the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals (in a decision written by Sandra Day O'Connor sitting as a Circuit judge) upheld the policy of the Fredericksburg, Virginia city council that requires prayers which open its sessions to be nondenominational. (See prior posting.)

Vatican Diplomat Cardinal Pio Laghi Dies

AP reports that Cardinal Pio Laghi, a long-time member of the Vatican's diplomatic corps, died yesterday at the age of 82. After serving in several other countries, he was named the Vatican's envoy to Washington in 1980, before the countries had formal diplomatic relations. He oversaw the establishment of formal US-Vatican diplomatic relations and remained until 1990 as the Vatican's Apostolic Pro-Nuncio. In 2003, Pope John Paul II dispatched Laghi (who was a friend of the Bush family) to Washington with a letter to attempt to persuade George W. Bush not to invade Iraq. Yesterday President Bush issued a statement expressing condolences to Pope Benedict XVI and all Catholics on Laghi's passing, saying: "Cardinal Laghi always strove to unite people of all religions and promote reconciliation, religious freedom, and tolerance."

Church Assets Awarded In Divorce To Leader's Ex-Wife

In Florida, a Miami-Dade County state district court judge has decided that Growing in Grace ministry is so much the alter ego of its leader, Jose Luis de Jesus Miranda, that his ex-wife is entitled to half the assets of the 300-church organization, as well as those held in her husband's name. The ruling came in a divorce action awarding ex-wife Josefina Torres $2.2 million. Judge Roberto Pineiro wrote that de Jesus "dominates the ministry like only a god can.... In what other corporation does the board of directors literally worship the president?" The minister also owes his ex-wife $121,000 in back alimony, and his daughter JoAnn, the church's manager, must explain at a Jan. 21 hearing why the church has not complied with an order to deduct Torres' alimony from de Jesus' salary. McClatchy Newspapers reported Friday:
De Jesus exploded into popularity - and controversy - in the past few years after he declared himself to be Christ. He later claimed that his teachings replaced those of Jesus and so he should be called the Antichrist. He and his followers then began tattooing themselves with "666," a practice that generated protests and headlines.
An appeal is being prepared.