Saturday, September 05, 2009

White House Visitor Logs Will Now Be Routinely Released; Lawsuits Settled

ABC News reported yesterday that the Justice Department has settled several Freedom of Information Act lawsuits brought by the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW). All the suits seek release of logs identifying visitors to the White House and the Vice President's Residence. One of the suits sought records of visits of nine prominent conservative Christian leaders to the Bush White House and Vice President Cheney's residence. (See prior posting.) Other of the lawsuits sought records from the Obama administration. On Thursday, the Justice Department released a letter (full text) summarizing the settlement agreement under which it will release the requested records. In addition, the White House will change its policy for the future and will release the names of White House visitors and the officials with whom they met. Release will be made monthly online, with a 3 to 4 month reporting delay and with certain redactions for national security and privacy purposes. Yesterday CREW issued a statement announcing the settlement.

3rd Circuit Tells BIA: Reconsider Whether Iran May Torture Christian Convert

In Ghaziaskar v. Attorney General for the United States, (3d Cir., Sept. 3, 2009), the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, while upholding a portion of the Board of Immigration Appeal's determinations, remanded to BIA the claim by an Iranian immigrant that if he were deported to Iran it is more likely than not that he would face torture. If he can show that, he would be entitled to have his deportation delayed under the Convention Against Torture. Part of Ghaziaskar's claim was that his conversion to Christianity could subject him to torture. The Immigration Judge questioned Ghaziaskar's credibility, but the 3rd Circuit said that the judge failed to consider the practices of Christian churches in Iran. He also failed to consider current conditions in Iran. The Legal Intelligencer reports on the decision.

Friday, September 04, 2009

Italian Prime Minister In Historic Feud With The Vatican

Today's Brisbane (Australia) Times reports from Italy on what it calls an historic and potentially disastrous schism between Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and the Vatican. It all began when the Italian daily la Repubblica began repeatedly to ask Berlusconi to explain his relationships with several young women, including an aspiring teen model from Naples. Berlusconi responded by filing a libel suit against la Repubblica, and threatened to sue several other newspaper. European media sharply criticized Berlusconi's attack on the press, and so did the Vatican by cancelling the annual dinner traditionally shared with the Prime Minister after the Perdonanza Mass, a centuries-old service for the forgiveness of sin. Berlusconi responded by cancelling his attendance at the Mass in the earthquake-torn town of L'Aquila. However he also began a counter attack using a newspaper owned by his brother to attack the editor of Avvenire, Italy's main Catholic newspaper.

The Berlusconi paper called Catholic editor, Dino Boffo, a homosexual and claimed he was being sued by the wife of a man he was in a relationship with. Boffo was supported by a public statement from the Vatican, but on Thursday, after issuing a detailed rebuttal and explanation of the allegations, Boffo resigned. He charged his opponents with ''media butchery.'' Brisbane's Times says: "The rift between Mr Berlusconi's administration and the Vatican is now being read as the most serious battle between church and state since World War II."

Iowa School District Unveils Revised Religious Liberty Draft Policy

After withdrawing its original draft policy on religious liberty in schools (see prior posting), Spencer, Iowa school officials today unveiled a new draft (full text). It provides in part:

Teachers shall prepare and teach lessons throughout the year and throughout the curriculum that:

  • Approach religion as academic, not devotional
  • Strive for student awareness of religions, not acceptance of religions
  • Study about religion, but do not practice religion in the classroom
  • Expose students to diversity of religious views, not impose any particular view
  • Educate about a variety of religions, not promote or denigrate religion
  • Inform students about various beliefs, not conform students to any particular belief
  • Demonstrate the impact of economic, social, political and cultural effects of religion throughout history
  • Are age appropriate
The Spencer Daily Reporter covers these developments.

Obama Issues Proclamation On Remembrance of 9-11 Victims

President Obama yesterday issued a Proclamation (full text) declaring Sept. 4-6 as National Days of Prayer and Remembrance 2009. The Proclamation focuses on the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks as well as on members of the armed forces "who work every day to keep our Nation safe from terrorism and other threats to our security." The Proclamation requests: "that the people of the United States, each in their own way, honor the victims of September 11, 2001, and their families through prayer, memorial services, the ringing of bells, and evening candlelight remembrance vigils."

Controversy Persists Over Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate's 20-Year Old Thesis

A controversy has been developing in Virginia this week over the masters' thesis written twenty years ago by now Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Robert F. McDonnell. (Washington Post 8/30.) The 93-page thesis titled The Republican Party's Vision for the Family: The Compelling Issue of the Decade was written while McDonnell was a student at what is now Regent University, founded by Pat Robertson. The Washington Post described the thesis:
McDonnell described working women as "detrimental" to the traditional family. He criticized a U.S. Supreme Court decision legalizing contraception for unmarried couples and decried the "purging" of religion from schools. He advocated character education programs in public schools to teach "traditional Judeo-Christian values," and he criticized federal tax credits for child care expenditures because they encouraged women to enter the workforce.
In this week's Atlantic, Wendy Kaminer examines whether or not the thesis is relevant to today's campaign given McDonnell's statements that some of his views expressed in the thesis have changed. Kaminer says she still has questions. For example, she writes: "Reading McDonnell's thesis, which relies on slogans, political talking points, and declarations of faith more than argument, I also wonder if he's developed his capacity for nuanced, rational thought." [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Opinion Issued In Case Ordering Parochial School Student Into Public School Band

A Pennsylvania federal district court has now issued a detailed written opinion explaining the temporary restraining order it issued last week (see prior posting) requiring the the Burrell (PA) High School to permit a student who transferred to a parochial school to remain in the high school band. In Trefelner v. Burrell School District, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78785 (WD PA, Sept. 2, 2009), the court held that the free exercise rights of Alexander Trefelner, an eighth grade saxophone player, were infringed by the school's policy. The policy, by permitting exceptions for home-schooled students and students attending charter schools, favors secular over religious motivations. The policy is not a neutral policy of general applicability. The reasons advanced for allowing home and charter schooled students to participate apply equally to parochial school students.

Jury Rejects Dance Teacher's Religious Discrimination Claim

In San Diego, California yesterday, a state court jury rejected a former public school dance teacher's religious discrimination lawsuit against the Lemon Grove (CA) School District. According to 10News, Kathy Villalobos claimed the school district fired her for playing dance music containing religious lyrics. However the jury believed the school board that argued Villalobos was fired for missing and cancelling classes. School officials said Villalobos was merely told that if she was going to use religious music, it should be from a wide variety of religions. Villalobos says she plans to appeal the decision.

Groups Urge Change In Senate Bill To Permit Head Coverings In Drivers License Photos

Yesterday more than a dozen religious advocacy and interfaith groups sent a letter (full text) to the chairman and ranking member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee urging them to support an amendment to S. 1261, the PASS ID Act, that is pending in the Senate. The bill pressures states to issue drivers licences and identification cards that contain a digital photograph and other security features. The letter urges that specific language be added to the bill to protect the right of individuals to wear religious head coverings without removal or modification in driver's license and other identification photos. The letter explains: "Our request relates specifically to turbans, yarmulkes, hijabs, and other religious headcoverings; it does not relate to items that conceal the face." Even though language currently in the proposed bill calls for the Department of Homeland Security to issue regulations that include protections for constitutional rights and civil liberties of applicants for licenses and ID cards, apparently DHS does not believe that the language allows them to require states to permit head coverings to be worn in license photos.

Court Enforces Biblically Based Arbitration Agreement

In Easterly v. Heritage Christian Schools., Inc., 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76269 (SD IN, Aug. 26, 2009), an Indiana federal district court enforced a Biblically-based arbitration agreement between a high school English teacher and the Christian school at which she was employed for some 20 years before she was forced from her job. The contract required teacher Dorothy Easterly to "to resolve differences with others (parents, fellow-workers, Administration) by following the biblical pattern of Matthew 18:15-17," and if that failed to submit any controversy to mediation and binding arbitration conducted under the "Rules of Procedure for Christian Conciliation." The court rejected Easterly's claim that the arbitration agreement was vague, that it deprived her of her ability to vindicate rights protected by disability and age discrimination statutes, and that the procedures were procedurally inadequate. [Thanks to Michael Francisco for the lead.]

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Canadian Tribunal Says Internet Hate Speech Law Is Unconstitutional

In a 107-page opinion handed down yesterday, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (CHRT) held that Canada's Internet hate speech law is unconstitutional. The CHRT is an adjudicative body that hears discrimination charges referred to it by the Canadian Human Rights Commission. In Warman v. Lemire, (CHRT, Sept. 2, 2009), an opinion by Tribunal member Athanasios Hadjis held that amendments adding monetary penalties to the hate speech law since a 1990 Canadian Supreme Court decision upholding it now make the statute's infringement of free expression disproportionate to the law's objectives. The opinion reasons:
The Supreme Court held in Taylor that despite not requiring any proof of intent to discriminate, s. 13(1) only minimally impairs freedom of expression principally because the Act’s purpose is to prevent discrimination (as well as compensating and protecting the victim), rather than punish moral blameworthiness. ...S. 13(1) has, since the 1998 amendments, lost the exclusively compensatory and preventative features that characterized it in the eyes of the majority in Taylor. Following the Court's reasoning, it can therefore no longer be concluded that the provision still minimally impairs the Charter guaranteed freedom of expression.
Canadian Press reports on the decision. The Ottawa Citizen says that an appeal to the Federal Court of Canada is likely because two other previous Tribunal decisions found the statute constitutional. [Thanks to PewSitter for the lead.]

Religious Peyote Exemption Does Not Invalidate Federal Drug Laws

In United States v. Valazquez, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77946 (WD OK, Aug. 31, 2009), a defendant facing federal drug charges argued that the federal controlled substances laws are unconstitutional because of the exemption they grant to the Native American Church for the use of peyote. Relying on several previously decided cases, the court held that the exemption does not violate the Establishment Clause. It also rejected a 5th Amendment equal protection challenge because defendant did not show that he was similarly situated. His possession of methamphetamine was not related to his religious beliefs or practices.

Churches Sue To Prevent Noise Ordinance From Limiting Their Carillon Bells

Three churches in Phoenix, Arizona yesterday filed a federal lawsuit against the city of Phoenix challenging its noise ordinance that has been applied to limit ringing of carillon bells by local churches. The complaint (full text) in St. Mark Roman Catholic Parish Phoenix v. City of Phoenix, (D AZ, filed 9/2/2009), alleges that the noise ordinance is unconstitutionally vague. It also claims that application of the ordinance to churches violates their free speech rights and their right to free exercise of religion under both the federal and Arizona constitutions and Arizona statutory law. A release by Alliance Defense fund announcing the lawsuit criticized the ordinance for exempting ice cream trucks but not churches. Earlier this year, the clergyman of one of the plaintiff churches in this case was convicted of violating the noise ordinance and given a suspended jail sentence along with 3 years' probation. (See prior posting.)

Dutch Prosecutors Will Move Against Anti-Jewish Cartoon

According to Dutch News yesterday, the Dutch public prosecution department has announced that it will file charges against the Arab European League for a cartoon it has posted on its website. The cartoon depicts two men in business suits discussing how to increase the numbers killed in the Holocaust. Prosecutors say the cartoon 'insults Jews because of their race and/or religion." It suggests that Jews themselves invented the idea that 6 million were killed during World War II. The cartoon was an old one that had been taken off the group's website three years ago. However it was posted again after Dutch prosecutors refused to prosecute the TV program Nova and Dutch politician Geert Wilders over republication of cartoons insulting the Prophet Muhammad. Prosecutors say those cartoons did not violate Dutch law because they targeted Muhammad, not Muslims in general. The Dutch Supreme Court drew this distinction in a case decided earlier this year. (See prior posting.) AEL does not think any of the cartoon should be subject to prosecution.

Canadian Court Rejects Challenge To Quebec's New Religious Survey Courses

In the Canadian province of Quebec, a trial court judge has rejected a challenge by Christian parents to the mandatory new course in grades 1 through 11 in Quebec schools that teaches about a broad range of world religions. The Ethics and Religious Culture course covers Christianity, Judaism, aboriginal spirituality, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism. (See prior posting.) It replaces parents' choice of one of three separate courses that focused on Catholic or Protestant thought, or moral instruction. Yesterday's National Post reports on the decision by a Drummondville Superior Court. Justice Jean-Guy Dubois wrote that "the court does not see how the ... course limits the plaintiff's freedom of conscience and of religion for the children when it provides an overall presentation of various religions without obliging the children to adhere to them." During the trial, one mother testified that it was confusing for her son to learn about Islam while he was still forming his own Catholic spirituality.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Remarks At Kennedy Memorial Service Raise Issue On Mormon Temple Zoning

According to yesterday's Belmont (MA) Citizen-Herald, remarks delivered by Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch at the memorial service for Sen. Edward Kennedy last Friday (full text) have caused some former litigants to question a decision handed down in 2001 by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Here is what Hatch said:
There was another time when the Mormon church was nearing completion of its temple here in Boston. Belmont , I think. I was approached by several people working in the temple and informed that the city would not allow a spire to be placed on the top of the temple with an angel on top of it as is customary on Mormon temples. I immediately called Ted and asked for help. Not long after that conversation, he called me back and said, "All of western Massachusetts will see the Angel Gabriel on the top of the Mormon temple. (LAUGHTER) Though I was tempted to leave it alone, I had to inform Teddy it was actually the Angel Maroni....
It turns out that the question of whether a special zoning permit would be granted for the church to build its 85-foot high steeple was litigated all the way to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. In Martin v. Corporation of the Presiding Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, (MA Sup. Jud. Ct., 2001), Massachusetts' high court held that a state law limiting zoning restrictions on the use of land for religious purposes (the "Dover Amendment") precluded the "unreasonable" height restriction that Belmont's zoning laws imposed.

Now those who opposed the Temple construction are asking whether Kennedy influenced the Supreme Judicial Court's decision. They say Hatch's reference to the time construction was nearing completion would put his call to Kennedy after the February 2000 decision by the Middlesex Superior Court to reverse the decision of Belmont's zoning board of appeals and ban the steeple. The only determination left after that point was that by the Supreme Judicial Court. A spokesperson for the court, however, says they had no interaction with Kennedy and he did not influence the justices in the temple case.

Obama Hosts Iftar Dinner With Interesting Guest List

Last night at the White House, President Obama hosted an iftar dinner marking the Muslim observance of Ramadan. This follows a precedent begun by President Bill Clinton and continued by President George W. Bush (New York Times, Huffington Post). The guest list for last night's dinner was particularly interesting-- cabinet members, members of Congress, ambassadors from counties with significant Muslim populations (including Israel), members (including Jewish and Christian members) of the President’s Council on Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships, and various Muslim notables. (Washington Post.) Included were Marine Lt. Cmdr. Abuhena Saifulislam (who has given the prayer at President Bush's Ramadan dinner), and ACLU lawyer Jameel Jaffer whose lawsuit has forced the White House to release secret documents on C.I.A. interrogations and detention. Among the guests highlighted in President Obama's remarks (full text) at the dinner was Nashala Hearn from Muskogee, Oklahoma, whose Justice Department-backed lawsuit vindicated her right to wear a hijab (headscarf) to school.

"Classical" Charter School Sues Challenging Ban On Use of Religious Texts

Yesterday, an Idaho charter school filed a federal lawsuit against members of the Idaho Public Charter School Commission and other state officials, challenging a Commission order banning the use of the Bible or any other religious documents or texts in public charter school classrooms. Plaintiff, the Nampa Classical Academy, had developed its entire curriculum in a classical, liberal arts format, using primary texts-- secular and religious-- as a method of educating its students. The complaint (full text) in Nampa Classical Academy v. Goesling, (D ID, filed 9/1/2009), alleges that a majority of the planned texts are secular. It says that the Academy, which is about to open for its first year of operations, has no intent to use religious texts in devotional manner, and will not be teaching religious tenets. Religious materials, like secular documents, will be used to study western civilization in classes such as history, literature, art or music. The complaint sets out five causes of action: procedural due process, free speech, establishment clause and equal protection clause violations, as well as violations of the state statute setting out procedures for issuing a notice of defect to charter schools. Alliance Defense Fund announced the filing of the lawsuit. (See prior related posting.)

Federal Community Service Agency Designates This Week As "Interfaith Service Week"

The Corporation for National & Community Service (a federal agency) announced yesterday that President Obama's "United We Serve" initiative has designated Aug. 31 through Sept. 6 as "Interfaith Service Week." The week honors efforts of faith-based organizations working across religious lines to strengthen communities. The press release highlighted a number of specific interfaith projects being carried out across the country this week.

Consent Order Settles Suit On In-School Posters Announcing Prayer Events

In May, a Tennessee federal district court issued a preliminary injunction barring Wilson County (TN)'s Lakeview Elementary School from enforcing a broadly written school speech policy to suppress religious references on posters made by students and parents to publicize "See You At the Pole" and National Day of Prayer events at the school. (See prior posting.) On Monday, Alliance Defense Fund announced that the lawsuit has been settled with the entry of a Consent Order (full text). The order makes the preliminary injunction permanent and requires that any new policy restricting religious speech on posters must be reasonable, viewpoint neutral and in accordance with federal law. The Wilson County School Board also paid $50,000 of plaintiffs' attorneys fees and paid nominal damages of $1. The settlement come just in time for this year's See You At the Pole event scheduled nationally for Sept. 23.