Monday, September 07, 2020

Sudan Agrees To Separation of Religion and State As Part of Peace Deal

 Voice of America reports:

Sudan's transitional government has agreed in principle to separate religion and state after three decades of Islamic rule in the country.

Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and Abdel-Aziz Adam al-Hilu, the leader of the rebel SPLM-North faction, signed a declaration of principles in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, Thursday evening [Sept. 3] that says, "The state shall not establish an official religion. No citizen shall be discriminated against based on their religion."

Christianity Today adds further details:

The agreement was signed in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, four days after a more inclusive peace deal was signed with a coalition of rebel groups in the Sudan Revolutionary Front in Juba, South Sudan.

The Juba agreement established a national commission for religious freedom, which guarantees the rights of Christian communities in Sudan’s southern regions.

Recent Articles and Books of Interest

From SSRN:

From SmartCILP:

Recent Books:

Court Denies Summary Judgment In Attempt To Permanently Enjoin Disclosure Requirements By Pro-Life Pregnancy Centers

 In National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Rauner, (ND IL, Sept. 3, 2020), an Illinois federal district court denied summary judgment to two pro-life crisis pregnancy centers that are seeking to permanently enjoin enforcement of an Illinois statutory provision conditioning immunity for health care providers on their disclosure of medical options, including those that conflict with their religious beliefs. They must also facilitate patients' obtaining such services from others. In 2017, a different federal district court judge issued a preliminary injunction against enforcement of the Act. (See prior posting.) In refusing at this stage of litigation to make the injunction permanent, the court said in part:

In this litigation, Plaintiffs allege that the CPCs’ ability to promote their religiously motivated pro-life messaging ... are threatened by changes to the Illinois Healthcare Right of Conscience Act adopted in 2016....The law will compel them, Plaintiffs assert, to discuss the benefits of treatments they deem objectionable: abortion, contraception, or sterilization. Likewise, under the law, Plaintiffs must facilitate those treatments by providing patients with lists of doctors who provide those services or by transferring or referring patients to them. Both requirements violate Plaintiffs’ First Amendment Speech and Free Exercise rights, they claim....

Starting with the requirement to discuss the benefits of abortion, the court agrees with Defendant that as in Casey, this is a regulation of professional conduct that only incidentally burdens speech....

The court is mindful that from Plaintiffs’ perspective, the law compels speech on a message antithetical to their beliefs and thereby contradicts this Free Speech principle. But the court too recognizes that Plaintiffs’ patients are no less deserving of this right to decide for themselves what ideas are worth considering and adhering to, and the state may be well within its powers to protect this principle in a context involving “matters of the highest privacy and the most personal nature.”...

If the law does no more than bring the regulations of conscience objectors into conformity with that of other medical professionals (again, still a disputed issue), then the amended HCRCA may not be characterized as discriminating against religious medical professionals. The law’s text and history ... suggest instead that the legislature adopted the changes due to legitimate concerns about patient access to healthcare and not out of a desire to stifle religiously-motivated conduct.

Sunday, September 06, 2020

6th Circuit: Settlement In Long-Running Baptist Children's Home Case Is Unenforceable

In Pedreira v. Sunrise Children's Services, Inc., (6th Cir., Sept. 2, 2020), the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, in an Establishment Clause case that has been in litigation for 20 years, held that a proposed modified consent decree that was to settle the case is unenforceable. The case involves a challenge to the state of Kentucky's funding of treatment for abused and neglected children in facilities operated by Sunrise Children's Services, a Baptist organization. (See prior related posting.) The 6th Circuit agreed with the district court that the consent decree violates Kentucky law because it requires enactment of new or modified administrative regulations to be implemented.

Saturday, September 05, 2020

Church Says Signage Required To Exclude Guns Burdens Free Speech

Suit was filed in a Texas federal district court earlier this week by a Unitarian Church (and another plaintiff) challenging a Texas law that makes it difficult to exclude individuals carrying firearms from one's property. The complaint (full text) in Bay Area Unitarian Universalist Church v. Paxton, (SD TX, filed 9/2/2020) alleges in part:

Texas has ignored the First Amendment and enacted legislation that singles out a group with which it disagrees—those who prefer to keep guns off of their property—and selectively burdens their speech. Specifically, Texas property owners who espouse this viewpoint must post multiple large, text-heavy signs containing language specified by the State in order to exercise the longest established and most fundamental of their property rights: the right to exclude. If these property owners use other means of indicating that firearms are not welcome on the premises—even if entirely reasonable and understandable—they cannot avail themselves of Texas’s criminal trespass laws. By contrast, property owners who wish to exclude others for any other reason at all do not face these same burdens. This viewpoint-based discrimination was entirely intentional....

The Church has an official policy that forbids carrying firearms, whether open or concealed, onto church property....  One of the most fundamental religious tenets of the Church is to address conflict through conversation, non-violence, love, and compassion. The Church believes that the signs required by the Acts detract from those religious principles.

[Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.] 

Friday, September 04, 2020

7th Circuit: COVID-19 Order Exempting Religious Services Is Valid

 In Illinois Republican Party v. Pritzker, (7th Cir., Sept. 3, 2020), the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected arguments by the Illinois Republican Party that Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker's COVD-19 Order limiting gatherings (including political gatherings) to 50 people is unconstitutional because there is an exemption from the limit for religious services. The court, denying a preliminary injunction, said in part:

A careful look at the Supreme Court’s Religion Clause cases, coupled with the fact that EO43 is designed to give greater leeway to the exercise of religion, convinces us that the speech that accompanies religious exercise has a privileged position under the First Amendment, and that EO43 permissibly accommodates religious activities....

Because the exercise of religion involves more than simple speech, the equivalency urged on us by the Republicans between political speech and religious exercise is a false one.... Free exercise of religion enjoys express constitutional protection, and the Governor was entitled to carve out some room for religion, even while he declined to do so for other activities.

Jurist reports on the decision.  [Thanks to Steven H. Sholk for the lead.]

Canada, Netherlands Will Assist In Case Against Myanmar For Genocide Against Rohingya

 In a Joint Statement (full text) issued on Wednesday, the Foreign Ministers of Canada and the Netherlands said that their governments plan to intervene in the genocide case that has been brought against Myanmar at the International Court of Justice. In the case, Gambia claims that Myanmar has taken and condoned actions against Rohingya Muslims that violate the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. In an initial decision, the International Court imposed provisional measures on Myanmar.  In their Joint Statement, Canada and the Netherlands said in part:

The Gambia took a laudable step towards ending impunity for those committing atrocities in Myanmar and upholding this pledge. Canada and the Netherlands consider it our obligation to support these efforts which are of concern to all of humanity. As part of this intervention, Canada and the Kingdom of the Netherlands will assist with the complex legal issues that are expected to arise and will pay special attention to crimes related to sexual and gender-based violence, including rape.

Al Jazeera reports on these developments.

9th Circuit Upholds California School Curriculum On Hinduism

 In California Parents for the Equalization of Educational Materials v. Torlakson, (9th Cir., Sept. 3, 2020), the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the dismissal of a suit claiming that California's History-Social Science Standards and Framework incorrectly describe Hinduism and treat it negatively in relation to the treatment of other religions. Rejecting plaintiffs' free exercise claims, the court said in part:

Appellants allegations suggest at most that portions of the Standards and Framework contain material Appellants find offensive to their religious beliefs. .... Offensive content that does not penalize, interfere with, or otherwise burden religious exercise does not violate Free Exercise rights. 

The court also rejected equal protection, due process and establishment clause challenges. Education Week reports on the decision.

Muslim Woman Sues After She Was Forced To Remove Her Hijab

Last week, a Muslim woman sued a Michigan county and two State Police officers for requiring her to remove her hijab when she was booked and arraigned on an outstanding warrant after a traffic stop. The process caused her to be viewed by a number of men with he head uncovered, in violation of her religious beliefs. The complaint (full text) in Cave v. Genesee County, (ED MI, filed 8/26/2020) asserts violations of the Free Exercise Clause, RLUIPA and the Equal Protection Clause. NBC25 News reports on the lawsuit.

Thursday, September 03, 2020

Court Enjoins Two Portions of Trump Administration's New Health Care Anti-Discrimination Rules

 In Whitman-Walker Clinic, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, (D DC, Sept. 2, 2020), the D.C. federal district court, in a 101-page opinion, issued a nationwide injunction barring enforcement of two of the changes to health care anti-discrimination rules made by the Trump Administration earlier this year.  (See prior posting.)  The court summarized its holding:

The Court ultimately concludes that Plaintiffs have standing to level challenges to certain provisions of the 2020 Rule, but not others, and that they are likely to succeed (and will suffer irreparable harm) on two central claims: first, that the 2020 Rule arbitrarily and capriciously eliminated “sex stereotyping” from the prior Rule’s definition of “discrimination on the basis of sex”; and second, that it improperly incorporated Title IX’s exemption of certain religious organizations from the statute’s nondiscrimination mandate. 

Suit Challenges Tennessee's Abortion Reversal Disclosure Requirement

Suit was filed in a Tennessee federal district court this week challenging a recently enacted Tennessee abortion law (Tenn. Code Sec. 39-15-218, effective Oct. 1, 2020)  that requires doctors to tell their patients that it may be possible to reverse the effects of the first drug given to induce a medical abortion if the woman acts quickly. The complaint (full text) in Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi v. Slatery, (MD TN, filed 8/31/2020) alleges in part:

By forcing Plaintiffs to communicate a government-ordered message with which they and the overwhelming consensus of the medical profession disagree, and to present abortion patients with untruthful, misleading, and irrelevant information, the Act violates the First Amendment right of Plaintiffs and their staff and physicians against compelled speech, as well as their patients’ privacy rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Act likewise violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection, singling out abortion providers and patients for adverse treatment not imposed on any other medical providers or patients in the State.

Courthouse News Service reports on the lawsuit. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Cert. Petition Filed In Hierarchical Deference Case

 A petition for certiorari (full text) was filed with the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday in Schulz v. Presbytery of  Seattle. In the case, a Washington state appellate court upheld a trial court's deference to decisions of the Administrative Commission set up by the Presbyterian Church USA's representative in connection with disputes regarding a break-away congregation.  (See prior posting.) The petition for review frames the Question Presented as:

In a dispute between a local congregation and its former denomination over ownership of property to which the local congregation holds legal title, does the First Amendment permit courts to apply a rule of absolute deference to assertions of ownership by the denomination?

[Thanks to Paul Harold for the lead.]

Wednesday, September 02, 2020

Catholic Student Sues After He Is Removed As University Student Senate President Because of His Views

Suit was filed this week in Florida federal district court claiming that plaintiff's free speech and free exercise rights were infringed when he was removed as president of Florida State University's Student Senate.  The complaint (full text) in Denton v. Thrasher, (ND FL, filed 8/31/2020), alleges in part:

Mr. Denton is a devout Catholic, and he expressed basic Catholic teachings to other Catholic students in a private group chat. But, because Catholic teachings have implications for some social issues that some consider offensive, those messages were shared, student outrage was fomented, and the Student Senate implemented an ad hoc religious test for office: no one with Mr. Denton’s beliefs can hold a leadership position in our Student Senate (even if they only talk about those beliefs in private)....

The complaint describes the contents of plaintiff's group chat with members of the Catholic Student Union:

One student shared a link to a video on YouTube that raised advertising and donation revenue for several organizations.... Mr. Denton observed that, “The various funds on that list are fine causes as far as I know, but everyone should be aware that BlackLivesMatter.com, Reclaim the Block, and the ACLU all advocate for things that are explicitly anti-Catholic.” ... “BlackLivesMatter.com fosters ‘a queer-affirming network’ and defends transgenderism. The ACLU defends laws protecting abortion facilities and sued states that restrict access to abortion. Reclaim the Block claims less police will make our communities safer and advocates for cutting PDs’ budgets. This is a little less explicit, but I think it’s contrary to the Church’s teaching on the common good.”

ADF issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.

Tuesday, September 01, 2020

Kentucky AG Says Closing Religious Schools In COVID Pandemic Is Unconstitutional

Last month, Kentucky's Attorney General issued Opinion OAG-20-13 (Aug. 19, 2020) concluding that state or local officials may not order the closure of religiously affiliated schools that comply with reasonable social distancing and hygiene guidelines during the COVID pandemic. The Opinion says in part:

Given the central importance of religious education to faith communities, any order by a state or local official to close a religiously affiliated school likely would “prohibit[] the free exercise” of religion in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, especially if the government continues its arbitrary manner of picking and choosing which institutions must close and which may remain open to the public. U.S. Const. amends. I, XIV.

In addition, such an order likely would violate Kentucky’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act, KRS 446.350, which provides that the government may not “substantially burden” a sincerely held religious belief “unless the government proves by clear and convincing evidence that it has a compelling governmental interest in infringing the specific act or refusal to act and has used the least restrictive means to further that interest.”...

Religiously affiliated schools in the Commonwealth have pledged to heed these expert recommendations, and guidance to wear face coverings, wash hands frequently, and maintain social distancing of six feet. For that reason, and considering that various other activities and gatherings may move forward—it is difficult to imagine how closing religiously affiliated schools could pass Constitutional or statutory muster....

[Thanks to Eugene Volokh via EpidemicLaw for the lead.]

7th Circuit: Ministerial Exception Does Not Cover Hostile Work Environment Claims, Absent Tangible Employment Action

In Demkovich v. St. Andrew the Apostle Parish, (7th Cir., Aug. 31, 2020), the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, responding to a question certified to it by an Illinois federal district court held by a 2-1 vote that the ministerial exception doctrine does not bar hostile work environment claims brought by a ministerial employee where no tangible employment action was taken.  In the case, the music director of a Catholic church alleged that his supervisor harassed an humiliated him about his sexual orientation, as well as his weight and his medical issues.  The majority held in part:

The ministerial exception gives religious organizations the power to use the full range of tangible employment actions to select and control their ministerial employees without judicial review or government interference under these federal statutes. These employers are thus able to control their employees in every way that would be necessary to exercise their religious freedoms. It is hard to see how the Church could not have adequately controlled plaintiff as a ministerial employee by deciding whether to hire him and whether to fire him, or by deciding his job duties, his place of work, his work schedule, his compensation, the resources he needed to work, and so forth.

Subjecting plaintiff to the abuse alleged here is neither a statutorily permissible nor constitutionally protected means of “control” within the meaning of Hosanna–Tabor.

Judge Flaum dissented, saying in part:

Beyond infringing on the Church’s free exercise rights in this case, allowing ministers to bring hostile work environment claims will “gravely infringe” on the rights of religious employers more generally “to select, manage, and discipline their clergy free from government control and scrutiny” by encouraging them to employ ministers that lessen their exposure to liability rather than those that best “further [their] religious objective[s].”

Monday, August 31, 2020

Recent Articles of Interest

 From SSRN:

From SSRN (Non-U.S. Law):
From SmartCILP:

  • The Second International Conference on Climate, Nature, and Society: Selected Conference Excerpts, [Abstract], 32 St. Thomas Law Review 3-30 (2019). Articles by: Morgan, Temperince; Antal, Jim; Kirtman, Ben; Gilbert, Oliver III; Rodriguez, Jose Javier; Vinciguerra, Tebaldo; Salkin, Jeffrey K; Ahmad, Nadia B; Gladwin, Ryan; Maxwell-Carroll, Tania; Cioffi, Alfred.
  • Interview with Khaled Beydoun (hosted by Nina Mozeihem and Samuel Bagenstos), 52 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 903-922 (2019).

Saturday, August 29, 2020

10th Circuit: Inmate Has Equal Protection, But Not RFRA, Claim Over Prayer Space

 In Tenison v. Byrd, (10th Cir., Aug. 28, 2020), the U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed an Oklahoma federal district court's dismissal of a Muslim inmate's claim that his equal protection rights were violated when he was not allowed to pray in the prison day room. Plaintiff alleged that Christian prayer was allowed in day rooms. The court concluded:

If believed, Tenison’s evidence is sufficient for a reasonable factfinder to conclude that Christians seeking to practice their religion in the dayroom deliberately are treated differently (and more favorably) than Muslims.

The court, however, rejected plaintiff's claim that his free exercise rights under the 1st Amendment and RFRA were  substantially burdened, saying in part:

We are not persuaded, however, that requiring Tenison to return to his cell to pray either prevents him from praying or subjects him to substantial pressure not to pray. Tenison is not prevented from praying; he simply must plan his dayroom time around the times he must be in his cell to pray. And having to forgo an unspecified amount of dayroom time does not amount to substantial pressure not to return to his cell to pray.

RFRA Claim For Insisting On Social Security Number In Passport Application Moves Ahead

 In Carmichael v. Pompeo, (D DC, Aug. 28, 2020), three individuals sued the State Department because it insisted that they furnish their Social Security numbers in order to renew their passports. Plaintiffs claim that identifying themselves with Social Security numbers violates their Christian beliefs. The court dismissed most of plaintiffs' claims, but allowed them to move forward, among others, with their claim under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The court concluded that plaintiffs had adequately alleged a substantial burden on their religious exercise:

They must choose between adhering to their religious beliefs—the sincerity of which is not challenged by the Government nor questioned by the Court—and receiving a government benefit.

Friday, August 28, 2020

Ministerial Exception Doctrine Does Not Apply To Hostile Work Environment Claim

In Middleton v. United Church of Christ, (ND OH, Aug. 26, 2020), an Ohio federal district court held that the ministerial exception doctrine does not preclude a minister bringing a hostile work environment claim, at least where the claim does not involve the court in excessive entanglement with religious matters. The court said in part:

[A]fter examining Middleton’s first cause of action, the court concludes that it does not implicate “any matters of church doctrine or practice.” ... Middleton’s hostile workplace claim involves allegations of racial and gender harassment that are wholly unrelated to Defendants’ religious teachings. ....

Nevertheless the court went on to dismiss the hostile work environment claim, saying in part:

While Middleton describes interactions that are unprofessional and unpleasant, none of the alleged conduct was physically threatening or humiliating. At most, these sporadic comments constituted “offensive utterances,” which “do not rise to the level required by the Supreme Court’s definition of a hostile work environment.”

The court held that plaintiff's breach of contract and promissory estoppel claims were barred by the ministerial exception doctrine. [Thanks to Heather Kimmel for the lead.]

Thursday, August 27, 2020

FDA Asks SCOTUS To Stay Injunction On Medical Abortion Access

Yesterday the federal government filed with the U.S. Supreme Court an Application For A Stay of An Injunction (full text) in American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. In the case, a Maryland federal district court issued a preliminary injunction against enforcement during the COVID-19 public health emergency of Maryland's in-person requirements that bar women seeking a medical abortion from obtaining mifepristone through a mail-order or retail pharmacy or to receive the medication by mail from their healthcare provider. The 4th Circuit refused to stay the injunction pending appeal. (See prior posting.) In its Application, the FDA argued in part:

Given that surgical methods of abortion remain widely available, the enforcement of longstanding safety requirements for a medication abortion during the first ten weeks of pregnancy does not constitute a substantial obstacle to abortion access, even if the COVID-19 pandemic has made obtaining any method of abortion in person somewhat riskier.

 The Hill reports on the Application. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]