In Roake v. Brumley, (MD LA, Nov. 12, 2024), a Louisiana federal district court in a 177-page opinion held that Louisiana House Bill 71 that requires a copy of the Ten Commandments to be posted in every public-school classroom in the state is facially unconstitutional and unconstitutional in all applications. The court, granting a preliminary injunction, said in part:
... [M]any Louisianians (like the Plaintiffs) (a) do not subscribe to the specific version of the Ten Commandments listed in the Act; (b) are not religious and do not agree with any version of the Decalogue; or (c) believe in other religions (such as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism) that “generally do not consider the commandments to be part of their belief system.”... The Complaint also highlights that H.B. 71 requires a version of the Ten Commandments that many Protestants use and that this is inconsistent with versions recognized by Jews or Catholics.... H.B. 71 fails to select both historical documents generally and versions of the Ten Commandments in particular “without regard for belief,”..., and is thus discriminatory as a matter of law....
Plaintiffs have shown a real and substantial likelihood of coercion,.., particularly given the fact that, in the school context, coercion has been found where “the school has in every practical sense compelled attendance and participation in a religious exercise”...
In sum, Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that the Act violates the Establishment Clause because it does not fit within and is not consistent with a broader tradition in place at the time of the Founding or incorporation. Moreover, even if there were a broader tradition in play, the practice mandated by the Act would be inconsistent with that tradition because it is discriminatory and coercive....
... [T]he Court finds that Plaintiffs have established a viable Free Exercise claim. First, they have sufficiently alleged that the Act burdens their “sincere religious practice[s]” and beliefs.... Specifically, the Act is at odds with ... (a) Unitarian Universalist, agnostic, and atheist views about proselytizing and the Ten Commandments generally; (b) Reform Jewish tradition as to the particular content of this specific version of the Decalogue and the need to instruct about it in the context of that tradition; and (c) Presbyterian teachings on the display of the Ten Commandments by secular authorities....
Additionally, there is another sincerely held religious practice that the Act burdens. For over fifty years, the Supreme Court has recognized “traditional concepts of parental control over the religious upbringing and education of their minor children. . . .”
The Court also easily rejects AG Defendants’ argument that the Act is neutral. “Government fails to act neutrally when it proceeds in a manner intolerant of religious beliefs or restricts practices because of their religious nature.”...
Louisiana ACLU issued a press release announcing the decision.