Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, October 09, 2009
Human Rights Lawyer In Egypt Sues To Stop "Hesba" Proponent
Thursday, October 08, 2009
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Brown v. Lindsay, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91126 (MD PA, Oct. 1, 2009), a Pennsylvania federal district court dismissed a challenge by a Muslim inmate to the temporary removal from the sheves of the prison chapel's library for security reasons of certain books. Plaintiff had since been transferred to a different facility and the Bureau of Prisons has rejected the Standardized Chapel Library Project policy responsible for the removal of the books. (See prior related posting.)
In Hamilton v. Smith, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91039 (ND NY, Sept. 30, 2009), a New York federal district court rejected an inmate's complaint that his free exercise rights and his rights under RLUIPA were violated when the prison refused to provide him meals that met both his religious tenets and his medical needs for a low-sodium, low-cholesterol diet. The magistrate's recommendation is at 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91032 (Jan. 13, 2009).
In Fetzer v. McDonough, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91063 (ND FL, Sept. 29, 2009), a Florida federal district court accepted a magistrate's recommendations (2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91074 (June 26, 2009)) and rejected an inmate's free exercise, equal protection and due process challenges to the Florida Department of Corrections discontinuance of its Jewish Dietary Accommodation Program.
In Bey v. Caruso, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 90314 (ED MI, Sept. 30, 2009), a Michigan federal district court rejected a magistrate's evidentiary ruling (2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 90323 (Feb. 27, 2009)) and held that material questions of fact remained for trial in a suit by an inmate, a member of the Moorish Science Temple of America, who wanted prison officials to use his religious name in prison documents.
In Smith v. Stoley, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91142 (WD MI, Sept. 30, 2009), a Michigan federal district court adopted a magistrate's recommendations (2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91456 (July 21, 2009)) and dismissed claims by a Wiccan prisoner who wanted to possess a number of items for religious rituals, such as a knife, a crystal ball, candles, incense and a senser, and wanted to cover his cell window in order to perform certain Wiccan rituals naked.
In Crump v. McBurney, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 90693 (WD MI, Sept. 30, 2009) a Michigan federal district court adopted the recommendations of a magistrate judge (2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91403 (June 11, 2009)) and rejected a RLUIPA claim by a prisoner who was wrongly removed from the prison's kosher food program for 39 days. Under prison rules, inmates could be suspended from the program if they purchased non-kosher food from the prison commissary. A guard had claimed that cough drops ordered by the inmate violated this restriction, but was later overruled when the warden ruled that these were personal care items, not food.
Philadelphia Couple Charged In Faith Healing Death of 2-Year Old Son
Wisconsin Parents Sentenced In Daughter's Faith-Healing Death
Court Says Diocesan Assets Belong To ECUSA Loyalists
Court Rejects RLUIPA and Other Challenges To Refusal To Rezone
Court Rejects Free Exercise Challenge To Financial Aid Form
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Supreme Court Hears Arguments In War Memorial Cross Case [Revised]
Court Rejects Murder Appeal Challenging Prosecutor's Wearing Of Cross
New 10 Commandments Case In Ohio Village
Wisconsin Court Refuses To Expand Tax Exemption of Parsonages
Senate Confirms Thomas Perez As Assistant AG For Civil Rights
Arizona Hotel Sued For Religious Discrimination In Employment
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Supreme Court Denies Review In Several Religion-Related Cases
Choose Life Illinois, Inc. v. White (Docket No. 08-1283). In the case, the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the refusal of the Illinois Secretary of State to issue a special "Choose Life" license plate after proponents obtained the requisite number of signatures requesting it. (See prior posting.)
Frazier v. Smith, (Docket No. 08-1351). In the case, the 11th Circuit upheld the constitutionality of a Florida statute requiring schools to excuse a student from reciting the Pledge of Allegiance only upon written request of the student's parent, regardless of the student's desires. (See prior posting.)
Rector of St. James Parish v. Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles (Docket No. 08-1579). In the case, the California Supreme Court held that building and property of the St. James Parish in Newport Beach belongs to the Episcopal Church, not the parish, once the parish broke away and affiliated with the more conservative Anglican Church of Uganda. (See prior posting.)
Arkansas Annual Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Inc., v. New Direction Praise and Worship Center, Inc. (Docket No. 08-1352). The Arkansas Supreme Court's January 2009 opinion in the case applied neutral principles of law to find that church property belonged to a break-away congregation.
O'Bryan v. Holy See (Docket No. 08-1384). The 6th Circuit decision below dealt with when the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act allowed civil suits against the Vatican in U.S. courts. (See prior posting.)
Sklar v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (08-9180). In the case, U.S. 9th rejected a claim by parents that they should be able to deduct for income tax purposes a portion of the tuition and fees paid to their children's Orthodox Jewish day schools. (See prior posting.)
Katz v. Mabus (Docket No. 08-1434). The 3rd Circuit's opinion below rejected religious discrimination claims by plaintiff, a civilian employee, against the U.S. Navy.
St. John's United Church of Christ v. FAA (Docket No. 08-1447). In the opinion below, the D.C Circuit denied standing to various religious communities to bring a RFRA challenge to the relocation of a cemetery that was necessary to complete expansion of Chicago's O'Hare airport.
Also, in Roman Catholic Diocesan Corp. v. New York Times (Docket No. 09-246), the full court denied a stay of an order issued in May by the Connecticut Supreme Court requiring release of some 12,600 pages of documents filed in 23 cases alleging sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy. (See prior posting.)
[Thanks to SCOTUS Blog and Josh Gerstein at Politico for some of the leads.]
TSA Says Sukkot Items OK On Planes
Observant Jewish travelers may carry four plants – a palm branch, myrtle twigs, willow twigs, and a citron – in airports and through security checkpoints. These plants are religious articles and may be carried either separately or as a bundle. Jewish travelers may be observed in prayer, shaking the bundle of plants in six directions. The workforce should note that TSA’s screening procedures do not prohibit the carrying of such agricultural items through the airport or security checkpoints, or on airplanes.
Top Egyptian Cleric Will Ban Niqab At al-Azhar
Tennessee ACLU Issues New Guide On Religion In Schools
Saudi King Removes Cleric Who Challenged New University's Liberalized Policies
Monday, October 05, 2009
UN Human Rights Council Passes Compromise Resolution On Freedom of Expression
CNS News reports on the varying interpretations of and reactions to the compromise language:Reaffirms ... the right of everyone to hold opinions without interference, as well as the right to freedom of expression, including ... the intrinsically linked rights to freedom of thought, conscience and religion....
Also expresses its concern that incidents of racial and religious intolerance, discrimination and related violence, as well as of negative racial and religious stereotyping continue to rise around the world, and condemns, in this context, any advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence, and urges States to take effective measures, consistent with their obligations under international human rights law, to address and combat such incidents
Speaking on behalf of the European Union, French representative Jean-Baptiste Mattei said the language about stereotyping referred to the stereotyping of individuals, not religions, ideologies or abstract values. Human rights laws do not and should not protect belief systems, he said, stressing that the E.U. continued to reject the concept of defamation of religion.Some however had a less sanguine view of the compromise language, such as this article from The Weekly Standard, and this somewhat less strident but still negative reaction from Eugene Volokh.
But Pakistan’s Zamir Akram, speaking for the OIC, used the terms "negative stereotyping" and "defamation of religions" interchangeably, and said the phenomenon affected not only individuals but also religions and belief systems.
Article 19, a free speech organization, called the vote on the resolution a breakthrough, given the tensions that have marked discussions on the issue at the U.N.’s human rights bodies. Executive director Agnes Callamard noted in particular the omission of the term "defamation of religion," although she said "religious stereotyping" was a vague concept that suggested that religions and religious ideas and symbols, rather than religious adherents, may be protected by international human rights law.
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a leading opponent of the religious "defamation" push, said the resolution passed Friday was a step in the right direction but still contained problematic language. "This resolution will be seen as a victory if it is the death knell for the concept of 'defamation of religions,'" said advocacy officer L. Bennett Graham. "But if it continues to provide international cover for overbroad anti-blasphemy laws around the world, it will only exacerbate the problem."