In Coleman v. LVMPD, (D NV, July 8, 2026), a Nevada federal district court at the screening stage dismissed with leave to amend a religious discrimination complaint filed by Oronde Coleman, a pre-trial detainee at the Clark County Detention Center (CCDC). According to the court:
Coleman generally sues Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) and ViaPath, the owner and provider of android tablets at CCDC....
Coleman alleges the following. He is a religious member of the House of Yahweh.... Coleman needs the Book of Yahweh and the Book of Yahweh Study Guide to worship his religion. However, the ViaPath tablets do not contain either of those ebooks even though they have other religious books for other religions such as Protestant, Catholic, Muslim, Jewish, Latter-Day Saints, Orthodox Hindu, Buddhist, Jehovah's Witness, Moorish American, Nation of Islam, and Sundar Gutka. LVMPD had approved these religious texts to be on the android tablet but discriminated against the House of Yahweh.
When Coleman reached out to ViaPath to add the Book of Yahweh onto ebooks, ViaPath responded that it was not a recognized religion, and they would not add it to the contents of the tablets. Coleman told ViaPath that he needed the two books to give praise to his heavenly father and his son in their rightful names. ViaPath told Coleman to write a grievance to LVMPD's religious services unit. Years ago, Coleman wrote grievances to the religious services unit, who told him they do not stock those books....
Although Coleman could potentially state colorable First Amendment free exercise of religion and Fourteenth Amendment equal protection claims, he does not do so in his complaint because he has not established that ViaPath and LVMPD are the parties he should be suing. I thus dismiss the complaint but grant Coleman leave to amend....
Coleman's complaint does not allege how ViaPath is a state actor other than its apparent contract with LVMPD. This alone is insufficient to establish that ViaPath is a state actor who deprived Coleman of his federal rights....
Coleman does not allege that his inability to obtain House of Yahweh religious books is due to a LVMPD custom or policy....